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III. Account of a Mineral from Orkney

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 January 2013

Extract

While examining an abandoned lead-mine in the vicinity of Stromness, in the year 1803, I found a mineral which, from its weight and appearance, I supposed to be carbonate of barytes. A few hasty experiments soon convinced me that it was a different substance; but circumstances occurring which prevented a more accurate investigation, the mineral lay neglected among the duplicates of my collection till last autumn, when having mentioned my doubts and conjectures respecting it to my friend Dr Murray of Edinburgh, I was strongly urged by that gentleman to undertake its analysis. During his short visit to Liverpool, a few preliminary experiments were begun, from which it appeared, that the mineral contained carbonate of strontia, and I have since completed its chemical examination.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1823

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References

page 82 note * I here state my own impression at the time when the mineral was found: but Professor Jameson, to whose authority I pay the greatest deference, has observed, in a work long ago printed, that the rocks in that neighbourhood consist of a mineral “intermediate between shistose and indurated clay.”—Mineralogy of the Scottish Isles, vol. ii. p. 233Google Scholar.

page 84 note * The first addition of water caused a considerable evolution of caloric.

page 87 note * See Thomson's, Annals, vol. iv. 395Google Scholar.