2. That by melting it with lead, and assaying them several times, we should in the end vitrify all the lead and the platina; and that this experiment would be able to purge it from a part of the foreign matters it contains.
3. That by melting without any addition, it seems to purge itself partly into the vitrescible matters it includes, since it emits to its surface small drops of glass, which form pretty considerable masses, and which we can easily separate after refrigeration.
4. That by making experiments on Prussian blue with the grains of platina, which appeared to be most insensible to the loadstone, we were not always certain of obtaining it; a circumstance which never fails with grains that have more or less sensibility to magnetism.
5. It appears that neither fusion nor cupellation can destroy all the iron with which platina is intimately penetrated; the pieces melted or assayed, appeared, in reality, equally insensible to the action of the loadstone; but having pounded them in a mortar, we found magnetical parts; so much the more abundant as the platina was reduced to a fine powder. The first piece, whose grains were only agglutinated, being ground, rendered many more magnetical parts than the second and third, the grains of which had undergone a stronger fusion; but, nevertheless, being both ground, they furnished magnetical parts; insomuch that it cannot be doubted that there is iron in platina, after it has undergone the fiercest efforts of fire, and the devouring actions of the heat in the cupel. This demonstrates, that this mineral is really an intimate mixture of gold and iron, which hitherto has not been able to separate.
6. I made another observation with M. Morveau on melted, and afterwards on ground platina; namely, that it takes in grinding precisely the same form as it had before it had been melted; all the grains of this melted and ground platina are similar to those of the natural, as well in form as variety of size; and they appear to differ only because the smallest alone suffer themselves to be raised by the loadstone, and in so much the less quantity as the platina has endured the fire. This seems also to prove, that, although the fire has been strong enough not only to burn and vitrify, but even to drive off a part of the iron with other vitrescible matter which it contains; the fusion, nevertheless, is not so complete as that of other perfect metals, since, in grinding, it retakes the same figure as it had before fusion.
[EXPERIMENTS ON LIGHT, AND ON THE HEAT IT MAY PRODUCE.]
[INVENTION OF MIRRORS TO BURN AT GREAT DISTANCES.]