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French man names 7.46-carat diamond found at Arkansas park after his fiancée

The Carine diamond is the largest registered at the park since 2020, and the man hopes to split it in two, for his Fiancée and his daughter.
Credit: Julien Navas, Crater of Diamonds State Park

MURFREESBORO, Ark. — On Thursday, Jan. 11, Julien Navas, of Paris, France, visited Arkansas’ Crater of Diamonds State Park for the first time and walked away with a 7.46-carat diamond.

Many visitors choose to name the diamonds they find, Navas decided to name his the "Carine Diamond," after his fiancée. He said he hopes to have the stone cut into two diamonds, one for his fiancée and one for his daughter.

The Carine Diamond is the fifth diamond registered at Crater of Diamonds State Park in 2024, and the largest diamond registered at the park since 2020 when Kevin Kinard found the 9.07-carat Kinard Friendship Diamond over Labor Day Weekend. 

This comes just over a month after a man found a 4.87-carat diamond within 10 minutes of entering the same Arkansas park.

Navas was visiting the U.S. to see the United Launch Alliance’s Vulcan Centaur Rocket launch in Cape Canaveral. After the launch, Navas traveled with a friend to see the sights in New Orleans, and along the way, he learned about the Crater of Diamonds State Park. 

The park piqued his interest because he had previously panned for gold and searched for ammonite fossils.

A few days before Navas’s visit, the park had received over an inch of rain, making it a wet and muddy day. After purchasing his ticket and renting a basic diamond hunting kit from the park, Navas headed into the search area and got to work. 

“I got to the park around nine o’clock and started to dig,” he said. “That is back-breaking work so by the afternoon I was mainly looking on top of the ground for anything that stood out."

According to Assistant Park Superintendent Waymon Cox, many of the park’s largest diamonds are found on the surface. “We periodically plow the search area to loosen the diamond-bearing soil,” he said. “As rain falls on the field, it washes away the dirt and uncovers heavy rocks, minerals, and diamonds near the surface.”

After searching for several hours, Navas carried his finds to the park’s Diamond Discovery Center, where he learned that he had discovered a brown diamond weighing 7.46 carats.

When he learned that he had found a diamond, Navas was stunned and said, “I am so happy! All I can think about is telling my fiancée what I found.”

Navas’s diamond has a deep chocolate brown color and is rounded like a marble. It is about the size of a candy gumdrop.

“It is always so exciting to see first-time visitors find diamonds, especially large diamonds like this one!” said Park Interpreter Sarah Reap.

Navas said of his visit to Crater of Diamonds State Park, “It is a magical place, where the dream of finding a diamond can come true! It was a real great adventure.” Navas said he plans to return to the park with his daughter when she is older.

It is the eighth-largest diamond registered since the Crater of Diamonds became an Arkansas State Park in 1972.

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