Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T19:00:15.207Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The forgotten uses of selenite

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

C. E. N. Bromehead*
Affiliation:
Geological Survey of Great Britain

Extract

We are apt to regard selenite or transparent gypsum as a useless mineral, apart from the very small quantity used in plates for microscope work. It is the object of this paper to show that from the first, to at any rate the seventeenth century in Europe and to the first half of the nineteenth in South America, considerable use was made of it. For the classical period the argument is based upon the identification of lapis specularis as mainly, if not entirely, selenite. Most translators render the name as talc or mica, the first word probably a vulgar error for the second, while some admit gypsum to have been included; Bailey in his notes on Pliny considers that two passages suggest gypsum but gives the preference to mica, while Zeitler claims nearly all the passages referred to below for this mineral. Pliny is, of course, our chief authority: I give the relevant passages in Philemon Holland's translation as more in keeping with the greater part of this paper, adding notes and the original Latin where necessary.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1943

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adams, (F. D.). The birth and development of the geological sciences. London, 1938.Google Scholar
Agricola, (G.). De ortu et cansis subterraneorum, De natura fossilium, Bermannns sive de re metallica dialogus, &c. Basle, 1546.Google Scholar
Aldrovandus, (U.). See Ambrosinus.Google Scholar
Ambrosinus, (Bartholomaeus). U. Aldrovandi … Musaeum metallicum. Bologna, 1648.Google Scholar
Ansted, (D. T.). In search of minerals. London (S.P.C.K.), 1880. Includes many extracts from a verse translation of Marbodus by Rev. J. King.Google Scholar
Bailey, (K. C.). The Elder Pliny's chapters on chemical subjects. Text, translation, and notes, parts I and II. London, 1929 and 1932.Google Scholar
Bassus, (Cassianus). Geoponica. c. 600 A.D. Edited for and attributed to Constantine Porphyrogenitus, c. 950 A.D. Text and Latin version by P. Needham. Cambridge, 1704. French translation, Lyon, 1550.Google Scholar
Bauer, (Georg). See Agricola.Google Scholar
Briggs, (M. S.). Short history of the building crafts. Oxford, 1925.Google Scholar
Bristow, (H. W.). Glossary of mineralogy. London, 1861.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, (E.). Travels through Germany. London, 1667.Google Scholar
Columella, (L. Jul. Moderatus). ob. 42 A.D. De re rustica. Text in Libri de re rustica. Paris, 1543.Google Scholar
Constantinus, (Porphyrogenitus). See Bassus.Google Scholar
Dioscorides, (Pedacius). I A.D. Opera omnia. Hanover, 1598.Google Scholar
Forbes, (D.). On the geology of Bolivia and southern Peru. Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. London, 1861, vol. 17, p. 38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gaudry, (A.). Geology of the island of Cyprus. English translation from French. London (H.M.S.O.), 1878.Google Scholar
Hewlett, (M.). The road in Tuscany. London, 1906.Google Scholar
Isidorus, (Bishop of Seville). ob. 636 A.D. Originum, sive etymologiarum Libri XX (Lib. XVI de metallis). In Auctores Latinae linguae. St. Gervase, 1602.Google Scholar
Jeffery, (G.). Historic monuments of Cyprus. Cyprus Government, 1918.Google Scholar
Juvenalis, (D. Junius). fl. 82 A.D. Text with notes by Prateus. London, 1699.Google Scholar
King, (C. W.). Natural history of gems and ornamental stones. London, 1867.Google Scholar
Lactantius Firmianus, (L. Coelius). ob. c. 340 A.D. Opera omnia. Cambridge, 1685.Google Scholar
Marbodus, . XI A.D. See Ansted.Google Scholar
Martialis, (M. Valerius). ob. 103 A.D. Text with notes by Farnabius. Leyden, 1661. Translation Bohn's Library, London, 1909.Google Scholar
May, (T.). Warrington's Roman remains. Warrington, 1904.Google Scholar
Nixon, (J.). Antiquity of glass in windows. Two letters in Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. London, 1759, vol. 50, pt. 2; 1781, vol. 52, pt. 2.Google Scholar
‘Periplus of the Erythrean Sea.’ I A.D. Author unknown. Text, wrongly attributed to Arrian, in Dodwell's Geographicae Scriptores Graeci Minores, vol. 1, Oxford, 1698. Translation with notes by W. H. Schoff, New York and London, 1912.Google Scholar
Petronius, (T. Petronius Arbiter). ob. 67 A.D. Text and translation by W. H. D. Rouse, Loeb Classical Library, London, 1913.Google Scholar
Pliny, The Elder (C. Plinius Secundus). ob. 79 A.D. Historia mundi [or] naturalis. Text Elzevir. Leyden, 1635. Translation by Philemon Holland, 2 vols. London, 1634 and 1635. See also Bailey.Google Scholar
Pliny, The Younger (C. Plinius Caecilius Secundns). fl. 109 A.D. Epistolae. Text Elzevir. Amsterdam, 1659. Translation by J. D. Lewis. London, 1879.Google Scholar
Pococke, (R.). Description of the East, &c. vol. 2, pt. 1. London, 1745.Google Scholar
Ray, (J.). Travels in the Low Countries… to which is added the travels of Francis Willughby. London, 1738.Google Scholar
Rudler, (F. W.): Gypsum. Encycl. Brit. 11th ed., 1910, vol. 12.Google Scholar
Sandford, (K. S.). Geology of Italian North Africa. Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. London, 1942, vol. 98, p. xv.Google Scholar
Seneca, (L. Annaeus). ob. 65 A.D. Epistolae. Text with notes by Lipsins. Antwerp, 1652. Text and translation, Loeb Classical Library, London, 1930.Google Scholar
Steno, (Nicolaus). The prodromus of … 1669. Translated by J. G. Winter, Univ. Michigan Studies, vol. 11, New York and London, 1916.Google Scholar
Strabo, . I B.C.-I A.D. Geography. Translation by Hamilton and Falconer, Bohn's Library, London, 1912.Google Scholar
Suetonius, (C. Suetonius Tranquillus). fl. 116 A.D. Text with notes by S. Pitiscus. Leuwarden, 1714.Google Scholar
Theopkrastus, . IV-III B.C. Text and Latin Version, Wimmer, F., Paris, 1931. Text mad translation with notes, Sir J. Hill, 2nd ed. London, 1774.Google Scholar
Willughby, (F.). See Ray.Google Scholar
Woodward, (J.). Natural history of the fossils of England. vol. 1. London, 1729.Google Scholar
Zeitler, (H.). Mica; its history, production and utilisation. London, 1913.Google Scholar