Some of the metals will not unite to others when hot, and others of them will; and such as will unite with others are called solders. Thus tin is a solder for lead, and brass, gold, or silver, for iron.
Ores are never found in regular strata, like the different kinds of earth; but in places which have formerly been cavities, running in all directions, with respect to the regular strata, and commonly called veins.
Many of the ores in their natural state are said to be mineralized with arsenic or sulphur, those substances being intimately united with the metallic earths.
In order to convert the ores into metals, some of them are first reduced to powder, to wash out the earthy or saline particles. They are then kept in a red heat, which the workmen call roasting, in order to drive away the arsenic, or sulphur, which are volatile; and in the last place they are fused in contact with charcoal, or other substances containing phlogiston; and to promote the fusion, lime-stone is frequently mixed with them. When the operation is completed, the unmetallic parts are converted into glass, or scoria, which lies on the surface, whereas the metal is found at the bottom.
To discover the quantity of metal in a small piece of ore is called assaying.
When metals are fused together, the specific gravity, fusibility, and other properties are changed, and in such a manner as could not be discovered from the properties of the constituent parts.
Of Gold.
Gold is the heaviest of all metallic bodies except platina. It appears yellow or reddish by reflected light, but green or blue by transmitted light, when it is reduced to thin plates.
Though gold undergoes no change in a common furnace, or burning lens, it may, in part, at least, be calcined by the electric shock.
Gold has the greatest ductility, and in wires of equal diameters, it has the greatest tenacity, of all the metals. One grain of it may be made to cover 56 square inches; some gold leaf being less than a 200,000th part of an inch thick; and when it is made to cover a silver wire, the gold upon it may not be more than one twelfth part of the thickness of the gold leaf.