Fig. 411.—Native copper.
Copper is the next metal we have to notice. It has been known for centuries. It is encountered native in many places. The Cornish copper ore is the copper pyrites. The fumes of the smelting works are very injurious, containing, as they do, arsenic and sulphur. The ground near the mines is usually bare of vegetation in consequence of the “smoke.” Sheet copper is worked into many domestic utensils, and the alloy with zinc, termed Brass, is both useful and ornamental. Red brass is beaten into thin leaves, and is by some supposed to be “gold leaf”; it is used in decorative work. Bronze is also an alloy of copper, as are gun-metal, bell-metal, etc.
Next to silver, copper is the best conductor of electricity we have. It is very hard and tough, yet elastic, and possesses malleability and ductility in a high degree. It forms two oxides, and there are several sulphides; the principal of the latter are found native, and worked as ores. The sulphate of copper is termed blue vitriol, and is used in calico-printing, and from it all the (copper) pigments are derived. It is also used in solution by agriculturists to protect wheat from insects. When copper or its alloys are exposed to air and water, a carbonate of copper forms, which is termed verdigris. All copper salts are poisonous; white of eggs is an excellent remedy in such cases of poisoning.
Lead is obtained from galena, a sulphide of lead. It is a soft and easily-worked metal. When freshly cut it has quite a bright appearance, which is quickly tarnished. Silver is often present in lead ore, and is extracted by Pattison’s process, which consists in the adaptation of the knowledge that lead containing silver becomes solid, after melting, at a lower temperature than lead does when pure. Pure lead therefore solidifies sooner.
One great use of lead is for our domestic water-pipes, which remind us in winter of their presence so disagreeably. Shot is made from lead, and bullets are cast from the same metal. Shot-making is very simple, and before the days of breech-loading guns and cartridges, no doubt many readers have cast bullets in the kitchen and run them into the mould over a basin of water or a box of sand. For sporting purposes lead is mixed with arsenic, and when it is melted it is poured through a sort of sieve (as in the cut) at the top of a high tower. (See figs. 413 and 414). The latter illustration gives the section of the shot tower; A is the furnace, B is the tank for melting the lead, and the metal is permitted by the workman at C to run through the sieve in fine streams. As the lead falls it congeals into drops, which are received in water below to cool them. They are, of course, not all round, and must be sorted. This operation is performed by placing them on a board tilted up, and under which are two boxes. The round shot rush over the first holes and drop into the second box, but the uneven ones are caught lagging, and drop into box No. 1. They are accordingly sent to the furnace again.
Fig. 412.—Shot tower.