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X. On certain Crystallized products, formed in smelting operations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Extract

Crystals have often been accidentally produced in the various processes of smelting, having the form and composition, or nearly so, of natural minerals; and have been from time to time described in the scientific journals. Some few, however, which have come under my notice have not been, so far as I am aware, previously described; and as the importance to mineralogy of a due regard to the nature of such crystals, as well as the conditions under which they may have been formed, is beyond question, I avail myself of this opportunity to lay before the Mineralogical Society specimens of the few products to which I allude, and to explain the circumstances of their formation:—

Specimen No. 1 contains some dark green crystals of arseniate of copper, resembling in appearance native olivenite. Before the blowpipe on charcoal these crystals melted easily, then, with a sort of deflagration, gave off copious arsenical fumes incrusting the charcoal, and yielded a button of metallic copper.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1881

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References

page 134 note * The brick work around was considerably cracked, and the vault below contained water for a long time previous to the destruction of the furnace, so that steam could easily permeate the bed.

page 134 note † This slag is very similar to that described by Mr. Arnold in the Min. Mag. vol. III. p. 114. J.H.C.