World's Largest Uncut Diamond up for Auction in London

The colossal rock, "Lesedi la Rona," is expected to fetch at least $70 million.

— -- The world’s largest uncut diamond will go under the hammer today at Sotheby’s auction house in London, where it’s expected to fetch at least $70 million.

The tennis ball-sized stone, named the Lesedi la Rona, or “Our Light” in Setswana, is thought to be 3 billion years old.

“The Lesedi la Rona is a unique and important discovery,” David Bennett, worldwide chairman of Sotheby’s Jewelry Division, told ABC News. “We therefore felt that offering Lesedi la Rona in a Sotheby’s auction was perhaps the best way to share it with the widest possible audience.”

Two independent reports commissioned by Sotheby’s state the Lesedi la Rona may have the potential to yield one of the largest top-quality diamonds that has ever been cut and polished. The Gemological Institute of America also stated the rarity and characteristics of the stone in a letter to Sotheby’s, which was published by the auction house.

“The 1,109 ct rough’s top color and transparency exemplify the ‘limpid’ appearance commonly associated with type IIa diamonds,” the California-based nonprofit gem research institute wrote, referring to a rare subgroup that comprises less than 2 percent of all gem diamonds. “Once polished or examined in more detail a final answer will become clear.”

Lucara sold a rough diamond weighing 813 carats in May for $63 million, setting a new record for a rough gem. But by putting the Lesedi la Rona up for sale publicly, Lucara CEO William Lamb said he hopes the diamond will sell to someone who will showcase it at a museum instead of a private collection.

“Nobody has ever done anything like this before,” Lamb told ABC News, describing his emotions before the historic sale. “It’s a mixture of anticipation, nervousness, excitement.”

Lucara estimates that 60 percent of the total sales value of the stone will flow back into the Botswanan economy, as the government receives its royalty and taxes.

Botswana didn’t discover its diamond wealth until a year after it gained independence from the British in 1966. Today, it’s the world’s largest diamond producer and relies heavily on those export earnings.