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Various

"Scientific American Supplement, No. 832, December 12, 1891"


Gold-colored allotropic silver in thin films is converted by the
slightest pressure to normal silver. A glass rod drawn over it with a
gentle pressure leaves a gray line behind it of ordinary silver. If
the film is then plunged into solution of potassium ferricyanide it
becomes red or blue, while the lines traced show by their different
reaction that they consist of ordinary silver. Heat, electricity, and
contact with strong acids produce a similar change to ordinary gray
silver.
These reactions afford the clearest proof that the silver is in an
allotropic form. To account for them on suppositions like Mr.
Meldola's would involve an exceedingly forced interpretation, such as
no one who carefully repeated my work could possibly entertain.
I am, etc.,
M. CAREY LEA.
Philadelphia, October 22, 1891.
* * * * *

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Pages:
193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217
print 'domy z drewna 1171501863' . "\n"; print 'domy szkieletowe 1171501862' . "\n"; print 'koła łańcuchowe 1171501716' . "\n"; print 'oc kalkulator 1171501658' . "\n"; print 'księgowość internetowa 1171501919' . "\n";