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amalgam
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amalgam

Any alloy of mercury with other metals. Most metals will form amalgams, except iron and platinum. Amalgam is used in dentistry for filling teeth, and usually contains copper, silver, and zinc as the main alloying ingredients. This amalgam is pliable when first mixed and then sets hard, but the mercury leaches out and may cause a type of heavy-metal poisoning.

Amalgamation, the process of forming an amalgam, is a technique sometimes used to extract gold and silver from their ores. The ores are ground to a fine sand and brought into contact with mercury, which dissolves the gold and silver particles. The amalgam is then heated to distil off the mercury, leaving a residue of silver and gold. The mercury is recovered and reused.

Amalgamation to extract gold from its ore has been in use since Roman times.

Tin amalgam is used for backing mirrors, and gold and silver amalgams are used for gilding purposes.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Children born to parents with high levels of toxins, such as many mercury-containing dental amalgams, and immune-system dysregulation, such as chronic fatigue or fibromyalgia, enter this world with many load factors.
0] exposure include dental amalgams, fossil fuel emissions, chloralkalai production, thermometers, incandescent lights, medical waste incineration, cremation, and Hg used in ritualistic practices (Counter and Buchanan 2004).
) Cetina defines an epistemic culture as "those amalgams of arrangements and mechanisms--bonded through affinity, necessity, and historical coincidence--which, in a given field, make up how we know what we know" (1).
 
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