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Ch.14: Apatite - Jet

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288
PRECIOUS STONES.
the property it had of attracting small bodies to itself when rubbed. From this property of Amber our word Electricity is derived. The substance was also known as Succinum and Lyncurium in Pliny's time, and is still spoken of as Succinite. The electrical charge is negative.
In origin Amber is the fossilised resin of certain plants ; at the time when it was viscous flies often became attached to it, and in their endeavours to escape have sometimes damaged themselves, so that a leg of a fly may be found enclosed in Amber a little distance from where the fly is. Apart from these inclusions most varieties of Amber—all but the "water-clear" in fact—show numerous minute bubbles; the smaller the bubbles the more numerous they are, and thus the more cloudy the specimen seems. Such cloudy material may be clarified by gradually heating the Amber in an oil of nearly the same refractive index, which is about 1"53. Eape seed oil is usually used; it gradually permeates all the minute pores and removes the disturbing cause very largely.
In composition Amber is an oxygenated hydrocarbon having the empirical formula C10H16O.
Amber is chiefly found on the seaboard of the Baltic, where after storms it is picked up on the shore; it is also dredged for in the sands of the shallows. It is found, too, along the coasts of Jutland and Schleswig-Holstein. In the south and east of England, in Western Russia, in parts of Poland, in Spain and Sicily, Amber is found in sandy deposits. One piece in the Imperial Museum in Berlin weighs eighteen pounds.
Amber of inferior quality is used in the manufacture of some varnishes, and small pieces are now hydraulically
Ch.14: Apatite - Jet Page of 311 Ch.14: Apatite - Jet
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