Jagersfontein Mine ( /ˌjeɪɡərzˈfɒnteɪn/) is an abandoned open-pit mine in South Africa located close to the town of Jagersfontein and approximately 68 miles (109 km) south-west of Bloemfontein.[1][2] Since it was first established in 1888,[3][4] two of the ten biggest diamonds ever discovered, the Excelsior and the Reitz (now called the Jubilee), were mined from Jagersfontein.[2] The term "Jagers" has since been coined to denote the distinctive faint bluish tint of the gems from this mine.[5] Among geologists, Jagersfontein is known as a kimberlite pipe,[6] and a prime locality for mantle xenoliths, some of which are believed to have come from depths of 300–500 kilometres (190–310 mi).[1]
Approximately 9.6 million carats (1,900 kg) of jewel-quality diamonds were extracted during the mine's century of operation, interrupted only by the two World Wars and the Great Depression.[2] After three decades of open-pit mining, underground mining began in 1913, and continued until its eventual closure on May 28, 1971, less than a year after the centenary of the first diamond discovery in the area.[3][5] Since then, an Open Mine Museum and the Jagers Mining Village have opened as tourist attractions at the site.
Research by historian Steve Lunderstedt in 2005 confirmed that the mine was the biggest hand-excavated hole in the world, slightly larger than the Big Hole in Kimberley, South Africa which had claimed the title up to then. It is probably not the deepest, though, since the final depth of the Big Hole reached 720 ft or more. Jagersfontein was dug by hand to a depth of 660 feet (201 m) by 1911.[7]