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XXIX.—On the Colouring Matter of the Morinda citrifolia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2013
Extract
The chemistry of the colouring matters has, perhaps, scarcely as yet met with the extended and complete investigation which the importance of the subject, in a theoretical and practical point of view, appears to deserve. The attention of chemists has been almost exclusively directed to the study of a comparatively small number of these substances, such as indigo, logwood, and the colouring matters of the lichens, which have been well and completely investigated; while the remaining, and by far the more extensive class, has received only a very partial and imperfect examination. To the latter, however, belong some of the most important of our dyes; and among others, the most valuable and indispensable of all, madder namely, the chemistry of which forms a problem as yet very far from being solved, but which chemists have shewn little disposition to submit to a thorough and searching investigation; and this disinclination seems to continue, notwithstanding that ground has been broken on the subject by the important observations of Robiquet, Kuhlmann, Runge, and others, which, though extremely incomplete, serve at least to indicate the importance of the results it is likely to afford, and to clear away the preliminary difficulties by which the commencement of such an investigation is surrounded.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of The Royal Society of Edinburgh , Volume 16 , Issue 4 , 1848 , pp. 435 - 443
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1848
References
page 436 note * De Fructibus et Seminibus Plantarum, vol. i., p. 144.
page 436 note † In addition to those above mentioned, colouring matters are contained in Morinda multifida, angustifolia, chachuca, and umbellata.
page 437 note * Rheede, , Hortus Malabaricus, vol. i., p. 97.Google Scholar
page 437 note † Rumphius, , Herbarium Amboinense, lib. v., cap. 13.Google Scholar
page 437 note ‡ Asiatic Researches, vol. iv., p. 35.
page 437 note § Philosophy of Permanent Colours, vol. ii., p. 308.
page 437 note ║ This is also mentioned by Rumphius as a character of the woody part of the roots and stem of his Bancudus angustifolia.
page 440 note * Annalen der Chimie und Pharmacie, vol. lx., p. 74.
page 442 note * Annalen der Chimie und Pharmacie, vol. lxii., p. 106.
page 443 note * Persoz, , Sur l'Impression des Tissus, vol. iii., p. 176.Google Scholar
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