Paper No. 174. Rare Earths: Their Occurrence And Use.

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 28
- File Size:
- 1735 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1909
Abstract
THE present article makes no claim to be exhaustive, since it cannot contain all the knowledge which scientists and manufacturers of the compounds of the rare earths have gained. The following notes are, therefore, simply an attempt to ascertain andclearly record the occurrence, properties, and uses of the more important of the rare earths, with a special reference to their commercial values and the industries based upon them.HISTORYIt was the mine manager, Gcyer, of Stockholm, who, in 1788, first drew attention to a black mineral which had been found in a quarry near Roslagen, in Sweden. In 1805 Klapproth received some specimens of this mineral, which he declared to be a newmineral. Subsequently Gadolin, professor of chemistry at Abo, analyzed the same mineral, and determined the presence of an unknown earth resembling alumina and lime. He named the mineral ytterbite, and afterwards gadolinite. Klapproth has alsothe merit of having detected (1804) another rare earth, which he named ochroit-earth, found in the Bastnas mine, near Riddarhyttan, in Wcstmannland, Sweden. Curiously enough, Hisinger and Berzelius simultaneously ascertained the existence of the same...
Citation
APA: (1909) Paper No. 174. Rare Earths: Their Occurrence And Use.
MLA: Paper No. 174. Rare Earths: Their Occurrence And Use.. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1909.