Fig. 311.—Pyrophoric iron.

Fig. 313 represents cylindrical bars of the best known metals, all weighing the same, showing their comparative density.

Fig. 312.—Iron and nitric acid.

Lead, like tin, is capable of taking a beautiful crystalline form when placed in solution by a metal that is less oxydisable. The crystallization of lead, represented in fig. 314, is designated by the name of the Tree of Saturn. This is how the experiment is produced: Thirty grams of acetate of lead are dissolved in a quart of water, and the solution is poured into a vase of a spherical shape. A stopper for this vase is made out of a piece of zinc, to which five or six separate brass wires are attached; these are plunged into the fluid, and we see the wires become immediately covered with brilliant crystallized spangles of lead, which continue increasing in size.

The alchemists, who were familiar with this experiment, believed that it consisted in a transformation of copper into lead, while in reality it only consists in the substitution of one metal for another. The copper is dissolved in the liquid, and is replaced by the lead, but no metamorphosis is brought about. We may vary at will the form of the vase or the arrangement of the wire; thus it is easy to form letters, numbers, or figures, by the crystallization of brilliant spangles.

Fig. 313.—Representation of bars of metal, all of the same weight.

Copper, when it is pure, has a characteristic red colour, which prevents it being confounded with any other metal; it dissolves easily in nitric acid, and with considerable effervescence, giving off vapour very abundantly. This property has been put to good use in engraving with aqua fortis. A copper plate is covered with a layer of varnish, and when it is dry some strokes are made on it by means of a graver; if nitric acid is poured on the plate when thus prepared, the copper is only acted on in the parts that have been exposed by the point of steel. By afterwards removing the varnish, we have an engraved plate, which will serve for printing purposes.