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gold |
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goldHeavy, precious, yellow, metallic element, atomic number 79, relative atomic mass 197.0. Its symbol comes from the Latin aurum meaning ‘gold’. It occurs in nature frequently as a free metal (see native metal) and is highly resistant to acids, tarnishing, and corrosion. Pure gold is the most malleable of all metals and is used as gold leaf or powder, where small amounts cover vast surfaces, such as gilded domes and statues. The elemental form is so soft that it is alloyed for strength with a number of other metals, such as silver, copper, and platinum. Its purity is then measured in carats on a scale of 24 (24 carats is pure gold). It is used mainly for decorative purposes (jewellery, gilding) but also for coinage, dentistry, and conductivity in electronic devices. Gold has been known and worked from ancient times, and currency systems were based on it in Western civilization, where mining it became an economic and imperialistic goal. In 1990 the three leading gold-producing countries were South Africa, 605.4 tonnes; USA, 295 tonnes; and Russia, 260 tonnes. In 1989 gold deposits were found in Greenland with an estimated yield of 12 tonnes per year. Although gold is ‘noble’ in that it shows very little chemical reactivity, it can be dissolved in aqua regia (a mixture of nitric and hydrochloric acid). From such solutions, certain gold compounds, such as the chloride AuCl3, can be prepared.
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The Golden Children's Bible reissues a classic first published in 1964, presenting new generations with a new cover with gold foil but retaining the foundations which made it so popular to prior generations. The first transistor, invented in 1947, was a centimeter-long slab of germanium pressed against the point of a triangle of plastic partly wrapped in gold foil. Tropez: Exhibition with Artists Showing in the Harbour, 1992, the artist organized his displays in the stalls of markets and offered art reproductions wrapped in frames of silver and gold foil as well as other trivial items to mostly unsuspecting and disinterested audiences (and a few observant art-world members). |
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