Online Encyclopedia

CASTOR OIL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 482 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CASTOR OIL  , the fixed oil obtained from the seeds of the
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castor oil plant or Palma Christi, Ricinus communis, belonging to the natural order
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Euphorbiaceae . The botanical name is from
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Lat. ricinus, a tick, from the form and markings of the seed . The plant is a native of tropical Africa, but it has been introduced, and is now cultivated in most tropical and in the warmer temperate countries . In
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size it varies from a shrubby plant to a tree of from 3o to 40 ft. in height according to the
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climate in which it grows, being arborescent in tropical latitudes . On account of its very large beautiful palmate-peltate leaves, which sometimes measure as much as 2 ft. in diameter, it is cultivated as an ornamental plant . In the south of England, with the habit of an
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annual, it ripens its seeds in favourable seasons; and it has been known to come to maturity as far north as Christiania in Norway .
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Plants are readily grown from seed, which should be sown singly in small pots and placed in heat early in Mardi heyoung plants are kept under glass till early in
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June when they are hardened and put out . The fruit consists of a three-celled capsule, covered externally with soft yielding prickles, and each cell develops a single seed . The seeds of the different cultivated varieties,,of which there are a
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great number, differ much in'size and in
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external markings; but
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average seeds are of an oval laterally compressed form, with their longest diameter about four lines . They have a shining, marble-grey and brown, thick, leathery
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outer coat, within which is a thin dark-coloured brittle coat . A large distinct leafy embryo lies in the
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middle of a dense, oily tissue (endosperm) . The seeds contain a toxic substance, which makes them actively poisonous; so much so that three have been known to kill an adult .

The oil is obtained from the seeds by two

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principal methods—expression and decoction-the latter
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process being largely used in India, where the oil, on account of its cheapness and abundance is extensively employed for
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illuminating as well as for other domestic and medicinal purposes . The oil exported from
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Calcutta to
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Europe is prepared by shelling and crushing the seeds between rollers . The crushed mass is then placed in hempen cloths and pressed in a screw or
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hydraulic press . The oil which exudes is mixed with
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water and heated till the water boils, and the mucilaginous
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matter in the oil separates as a scum . It is next strained, then bleached in the sunlight, and stored for exportation . A considerable quantity of castor oil of an excellent quality is also made in Italy; and in California the manufacture is conducted on an extensive scale . The following is an outline of the process adopted in a Californian factory . The seeds are submitted to a dry heat in a
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furnace for an
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hour or thereby, by which they are softened and prepared to
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part easily with their oil . They are then pressed in a large powerful screw-press, and the oily' matter which flows out is caught, mixed with an equal proportion of water, and boiled to purify it from mucilaginous and albuminous matter . After boiling about an hour, it is allowed to cool, the water is
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drawn off, and the oil is transferred to
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zinc tanks or clarifiers capable of holding from 6o to too gallons . In these it stands about eight hours,
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bleaching in the sun, after which it is ready for storing . By this method too lb of good seeds yield about 5 gallons of pure oil .

Castor oil is a viscid liquid, almost colourless when pure, possessing only a slight odour, and a mild yet highly nauseous and disagreeable

taste . Its specific gravity is •96, a little less than that of water, and it dissolves freely in
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alcohol, ether and glacial acetic acid . It contains palmitic and several other fatty acids, among which there is one—ricinoleic acid—peculiar to itself . This occurs in combination with glycerin, constituting the greater part of the bulk of the oil . The active principle to which the oil owes its purgative properties has not been isolated . It is, indeed, probable that it is formed in the intestine, as a result of some decomposition as yet unknown . The dose is from a drachm to an
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ounce . The pharmacopoeial mixture is best avoided, being almost uniquely nauseous . By far the best way to administer the oil is in capsules . It acts in about five hours, affecting the entire length of the bowel, but not increasing the flow of bile except in very large doses . The mode of its
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action is unknown . The oil will purge when rubbed into the skin or injected per rectum .

It is an invaluable

drug in temporary constipation and whenever a mild action is essential, as in pregnancy . It is extremely useful for children and the aged, but must not be employed in cases of chronic constipation, which it only aggravates, whilst relieving the symptoms .

End of Article: CASTOR OIL
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MATTHIAS ALEXANDER CASTREN (1813-1853)

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