"[E]xcepting the purest vitrifiable earth, all the others are mixed with heterogeneous matter. By these remaining heterogeneous matters are the different kinds of earth specified and characterised: and as they all preserve and retain their peculiar character, we ought to conclude from thence, that these extraneous matters are very intimately united. To purify and simplify these mixed earths, so that they shall be assimilated to the purest vitrifiable earth, would be a fine problem. But, probably, this problem is beyond the power of our art. For... the perfect separation of two substances, united together, is exceedingly difficult, this difficulty must greatly increase, when one of the... substances... has a very strong attractive power, as earth has. This is the... reason why we find so small a portion of pure earth amongst the bodies within our reach; and that on the contrary, the globe is covered with so great a quantity of earthy substances differing from each other so much, that we might be inclined to believe them to be bodies essentially different."
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Earth (historical chemistry)
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