Online Encyclopedia

ASBESTOS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 715 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ASBESTOS  , a fibrous

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mineral from Gr. aai(3earos, unquenchable, by transference, incombustible, in allusion to its power of resisting the
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action of fire . The word was applied by Dioscorides and other Greek authors to quicklime, but Pliny evidently used it in its
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modern sense . It was occasionally
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woven by the ancients into handkerchiefs, and, it has been said, into shrouds which were used in cremation to prevent the ashes of the corpse from mingling with the wood-ashes of the pyre . In different varieties of asbestos the fibres vary greatly in character . When silky and flexible they are sometimes known as mountain
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flax . The finer kinds are often termed
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amianthus (q.v.) . When the fibres are naturally interwoven, so as to forma felted mass, the mineral passes under such trivial names as mountain leather, mountain cork, mountain paper, &c . The asbestos formerly used in the arts was generally a fibrous form of some kind of
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amphibole, like
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tremolite, or anthophyllite, though occasionally perhaps a
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pyroxene . In
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recent years, however, most of the asbestos in the market is a fibrous variety of
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serpentine, known mineralogically as chrysotile, and probably some of the ancient asbestos was of this character (see AMLAx-THUS) . Both minerals possess similar properties, so far as resistance to heat is concerned . The amphibole-asbestos, or
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hornblende-asbestos, is usually white or grey in colour, and may
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present
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great length of fibre, some of the
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Italian asbestos reaching exceptionally a length of 5 or 6 ft., but it is often harsh and brittle . The serpentine-asbestos occurs in narrow
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veins, yielding fibres of only 2 or 3 in. in length, but of great tensile strength: they are usually of a delicate silky lustre, very flexible and elastic, and of yellowish or greenish colour .

The

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Canadian asbestos, which of all kinds is at present the most important industrially, occurs in a small belt of serpentine in the 'province of
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Quebec, principally near Black Lake and
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Thetford, where it was first recognized as commercially valuable about 1877 . The rock is generally quarried, cobbed by hand, dried if necessary, crushed in rock-breakers, and then passed between rollers; it is reduced to a finer state of division by so-called fiberizers, and graded on a shaking screen, where the loosened fibres are sorted . The
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process varies in different mills . In the
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United States asbestos is worked only to a very limited extent . An amphibole-asbestos is obtained from Sall Mountain,
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Georgia; and asbestos has also been worked in the serpentine of
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Vermont . It occurs also in South Carolina, Virginia, Massachusetts, Arizona and elsewhere . Dr G . P .
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Merrill has shown that some asbestos results from a process of shearing in the rocks . Formerly asbestos was obtained almost exclusively from Italy and Corsica, and a large quantity is still yielded by Italian workings . This is mostly an amphibole . It is in some cases associated with nodules of green garnet known as " seeds "—Semenze dell' amianto .

Asbestos is widely distributed, but only in a few localities does it occur in sufficient abundance and purity to be worked commercially; it is found, for example, to a limited extent, at many localities in

Tirol,' Hungary and Russia;
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Queensland, New South ales and New Zealand . In the
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British Isles it is not unknown, being found among the old rocks of North Wales and in parts of Ireland . Byssolite or asbestoid is a blue or green fibrous amphibole from Dauphiny . The Asbestos Mountains in Griqualand West, Cape Colony, yield a blue fibrous mineral which is worked under the name of Cape asbestos . This is referable to the variety of amphibole called
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crocidolite (q.v.) . It occurs in veins in slaty rocks, associated with jaspers and quartzites rich in
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magnetite and brown iron-ore . Their
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geological position is in the Griqua
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Town series, belonging to what are known in South Africa as the Pre-Cape rocks . Asbestos was formerly spun and woven into fabrics as a rare curiosity . Charlemagne is said to have possessed a tablecloth of this material, which when soiled was purified by being thrown into the fire . At a meeting of the Royal Society in 1676 a merchant from
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China exhibited a handkerchief of "
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salamander's wool," or linum asbesti . By the Eskimos of Labrador asbestos has been used as a lamp-
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wick, and it received a similar application in some of the sacred lamps of antiquity . In 'recent times asbestos has been applied to a great variety of uses in the
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industrial arts, and its applications are constantly increasing .

Its economic value depends not only on its power of withstanding a high temperature, but also on its

low thermal conductivity and its partial resistance to the attack of acids: hence it is used for jacketing boilers and steam-pipes, and as a filtering
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medium for corrosive liquids . It has also come into use as an electric insulator . It is made into
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yarn, felt, millboard, &c., and is largely employed as packing for
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joints, glands and stopcocks in machinery . Fire-proof sheathing and felt are used for flooring and roofing; fire-proof curtains have been made for the stage, and even clothing for firemen . Asbestos enters into the composition of fire-proof cements, plasters and paints: it is used for packing
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safes; and is made into balls with fire-clay for
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gas-stoves . Various preparations of asbestos with other materials pass in trade under such names as uralite, salamandrite, asbestolit h, gypsine, &c . "Asbestic"is the name given to a Canadian product formed by crushing the serpentine rock containing thin seams of asbestos, and mixing the result with lime so as to form a
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plaster .

End of Article: ASBESTOS
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PETER CHRISTEN ASBJORNSEN (1812–1885)

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