"We call that vitrifiable earth, the integrant parts of which when united form masses of matter or stones, absolutely white and colorless, much more transparent and hard than any other natural substances, and which suffers no alteration, or even fusion, by the strongest fire which we can apply to it."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Earth_(historical_chemistry)
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Earth (historical chemistry)
50 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Earth (historical chemistry) →
Related Quotes
"Pliny recorded processes involving metals, salts, , glass, mortar, soot, ash, and a large variety of s, earths, and s…"
"The Earths are white, inodorous, tasteless, and uninflammable substances—non-conductors of electricity, insoluble in …"
"What made silica so interesting was that... it did not seem to follow the established rules of chemical combination. …"
"Earth is one of the four simple substances called elements, or primitive principles; because they are indeed the most…"
"These general considerations are sufficient to convince us, that in nature a substance exists whose properties are di…"
"Earth is not found so pure as the other elements, fire, air, and water, which, though not entirely free from mixture,…"
"But we cannot say the same of earth; for a considerable number of substances are called earths, because they possess …"
"The most general and most probable opinion is, that as only one kind of fire, of air, and of water, so only one kind …"
"Some of the best philosophical chemists have rather chose to admit different kinds of elementary earths, than to inve…"
"By 3000 BCE the Sumerians, perhaps while heating copper to make it more malleable, had discovered that more copper co…"