Diamonds
Jeweler's Scale: New 100 x 0.01g DIGITAL JEWELRY SCALE Weigh Loose Diamond/Gemstone CARATS & More! Raw, Rough, Uncut or Cut Gems, Lapidary Materials, & other Stones!
DigiWeigh
AAA batteries included for FREE! Plus, this scale comes with a WARRANTY!!!
Bright blue, high-contrast LCD Display makes it very easy to read
Choose from 4 different modes: Carat (ct), Grain (gn), Gram (g), Ounce (oz)
Capacity & Accuracy: 500 x 0.05 ct; 1542.8 x 0.2 gn; 100 x 0.01 g; 3.527 x 0.0005 oz
Clear, durable cover protects the weighing platform when scale is not in use, and doubles as an expansion tray
Price:
$64.95
$24.89
Online high quality and clarity wholesale natural cognac red colored fancy cut loose real diamond, round brilliant shaped, natural baguette cut ...
Buy online Patented Fancy Signature Diamond Cuts, pink fancy cut diamond Shape, Buy Fancy Cut Diamond like Baguette cut, Princess cut, Radiant cut ...
rockdiamond.com - An Emerald Cut Diamond With huge personality ... loose emerald cut diamond step shaped GIA certified ...
"The full texts of all Tax Court decisions entered from Oct. 24, 1942 ... with case table and topical index".
GREEN MONSTER
In one corner of a long, barely lit room, standing in a spot that had been swept clean of the peeled ash bark that littered the rest of the space, Mike Callin, head forester for the Department of Environmental Conservation in Lake Katrine, addressed his team. He was splitting his attention between a map on the wall and his silent team. There were 900 grids on the map. The foresters had done recon on 500. But now, time had run out. “This week is our last real effort,” said Callin. “Then we transition into management.”
Callin and his crew were saddled with the impossible task of tracking an infestation of an invasive insect—the emerald ash borer, or EAB—across more than 200 square miles of forest, towns and private land. EAB is a tiny wood-boring beetle that burrows into ash bark during its three-week lifecycle, laying eggs that gestate over the course of a year. As they grow, the larvae kill the host trees by garroting the trees’ nutrient chain. Within a matter of decades, they are going to kill every single ash tree in New York state. “There is no hope for ash,” mused Callin.