IC 6331 Cobalt ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Paul M. Tyler
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
34
File Size:
15840 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1930

Abstract

One by one new metals come to share the burden of modern industry. Long before the Christian era potters and glass workers employed fine and costly blue pigments that contained cobalt. Cobalt blue class has been found in the tombs of the Egyptians and in the ruins of Troy, and many of the colors used by the ancient Greeks and Romans contained cobalt. The ancients, however, were apparently unaware that the colors they used were caused by cobalt, and it was not until late in the 17th century that the existence of the element was recognized, Writers in the Middle Ages referred to "cobalos" as an evil spirit that haunted mines and caused trouble to the miners. Subsequently the German worms "Kobold," meaning goblin, came to be applied to any baffling mineral and particularly to minerals that resembled ores but failed to yield metal when smelted. Even to-day there is something of an air of mystery about cobalt, and a medieval cloak of secrecy still surrounds many of the metallurgical processes employed in its production. "Zaffre" was mentioned about the middle of the sixteenth century by Biringuccio, and in 1735 the metal war, first prepared by G. Brandt. To preparation of cobalt compounds, however, must have been carried on in at least a small way ever since the opening of the silver-cobalt deposits of Schneeberg in 1470. By 1790 there were 25 works engaged in the industry, rust of them located in Saxony, but the total output of these works probably did not exceed 300 tone of cobalt annually, mostly in the fore of smalt. The smalt which contained approximately 6 per cent cobalt was sold in Venice in 1520 at about 16 cents a pound. A few refineries in Holland supplied the Irish linen trade, contributed a farce amount to the Dutch linen industries, and alto provided smaller quantities for the manufactuer of litmus in Holland. A complete description of the early [histor,] of the cobalt industry in Saxony, is given by Mickle in the Deport of the Bureau of Mines of Ontario, vol. 19, 1913, pt. 2, pp. 234-251.
Citation

APA: Paul M. Tyler  (1930)  IC 6331 Cobalt ? Introduction

MLA: Paul M. Tyler IC 6331 Cobalt ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1930.

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