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Ch. 1: Magic Stones Electric Gems

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56          THE MAGIC OF JEWELS AND CHARMS
explain these phenomena, even although the explanation is faulty.
The great French crystallographer, Abbé Haüy, relates his experiments on a tourmaline crystal.98· He set this crys­tal in steel clamps, with a long stem which was inserted in a wooden handle, and then subjected the tourmaline to the heat of a brasier. As the heat augmented and penetrated the stone, its natural electric force became decomposed, the two component fluids being forced to separate from each other. It was now necessary to cool the tourmaline off a little ; when too much heated the electrical phenomena were interrupted; they were also diminished in intensity when the stone be­came cool again. The perfect crystal chosen for experiment clearly showed the negative and positive electrical poles; even the smallest pieces showed this, and, indeed, if a very small piece were broken off the positively electric side of a crystal, it would preserve this positive electricity and soon develop a negative electricity also.
We may be somewhat loath to doubt the tale that little Dutch children were the first to note what to them was the queer action of some bits of tourmaline, but preference should probably be given to the statement that the discovery of the electric phenomena induced by heating in these stones was due to the fact that some Dutch jewellers put specimens of tourmaline in the fire to test their hardness, and then found that the stones attracted or repelled the ashes of the fire."
Toward the middle of the eighteenth century Dr. Haber-den, of London, confirmed the deductions of Lémery and the somewhat later experiments of the German physicist Aepinus, and the gay world of London took up the idea,
"* Abbe Hauy, " Trattato dei caratteri fisici delle pietre preziose," Ital. trans, by Luigi Configlfachi, Milano, 1819, pp. 135-138; see Plate II, fig. 49. "Aepinus, 1. e.
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