Since the publication, in the Quarterly Journal of Science for July, 1876, of an article on the Indian Diamond Fields, in which the writer, Captain Burton, does not appear to be aware of what has been done in these Colonies towards adding to our knowledge of the geological history of the diamond, I have been induced to re-write a paper, jointly prepared by the late Professor Alex. M. Thomson, of the Sydney University, and myself, and read before the Royal Society of New South Wales on the 7th December, 1870; and to incorporate with it a series of my own papers (of which the above was merely a summary), which appeared in the “Sydney Morning Herald” previously to that date. I shall confine my remarks to the mode of occurrence of the diamond in New South Wales, as the late Rev. W. B. Clarke has, in his valuable and interesting Presidential Addresses to the Royal Society of New South Wales in 1870 and 1872, almost exhaustively treated the subject, as far as regards our present knowledge of the diamond all over the world.