Thursday, August 5, 2010

The Disappearing Spoon



The Disappearing Spoon
 Wp-Content Uploads 2010 07 The-Disappearing-Spoon The title for Sam Kean's new book, The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements, comes from a prank that scientists sometimes play: they make a spoon out of gallium (which melts at 84 degrees Fahrenheit) and hand it to unsuspecting friends to stir their tea with.

The title sets the tone for this witty, anecdote-filled book about the role elements have played in science, art, war, commerce, medicine, literature, and other fields. An element I'd never heard of before, ruthenium, was the key to riches for Kenneth Parker, who used it to make fountain pen tips in 1944. A more well-known element, silver, plays a role in the fate of Stan Jones (I posted about him in 2002), Montana's Libertarian candidate for Senator in 2002. Jones drank a homebrew concoction of colloidal silver to prevent bacterial infection (he was afraid that conventional antibiotics wouldn't be available in the new millennium) and it stained his skin blue for good (the condition is called argyria and I wrote about it in my book, The World's Worst, which you can buy for $0.01 on Amazon). Cadmium is both a hero and a villain: a hero for being a part of vibrant pigments (I love my cadmium red and cadmium yellow acrylic paints), and a villain for sickening a great many people in the 1940s who drank out of drinking glasses lined with cadmium.

The disappearing spoon is my favorite kind of science journalism: it reveals a hidden universe in the form of a thrilling tale.

Buy The Disappearing Spoon on Amazon

Sent from James' iPhone

2 comments:

  1. "A more well-known element, silver, plays a role in the fate of Stan Jones (I posted about him in 2002), Montana's Libertarian candidate for Senator in 2002. Jones drank a home brew concoction of colloidal silver to prevent bacterial infection (he was afraid that conventional antibiotics wouldn't be available in the new millennium) and it stained his skin blue for good (the condition is called argyria"

    Silver yes, Colloidal Silver NO.

    Colloidal Silver cannot be made at home, that's Ionic Silver.

    He thought he was making Colloidal Silver, so that's what he reported and everybody believes.

    If he used tap water and/or salt in the process, he was making silver chloride and even at that, it would take years of abuse to cause Argyria.

    Silver chloride is the substance responsible for the reports of Argyria.

    Neither Colloidal or Ionic Silver are responsible for this condition.

    Safety Information Related to Nanoscalar-Oligodynamic Silver Ions

    http://www.natural-immunogenics.com/pdf/SS-White%20Technical%20Paper%20002-SafetyInformation-01-23-033.pdf

    Abstract:

    3. e-Medicine Journal, November 2, 2001; Number 11

    a. “Argyria results from prolonged contact to or ingestion of silver salts.

    It produces a gray to gray-black staining of skin and mucous membranes produced by silver deposition. Silver may be deposited in the skin either from industrial exposure or as a result of medications containing silver salts.”

    Neither Colloidal or Ionic Silver contain any salts if made properly.

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  2. Thanks for the interesting information. I had heard a number of people disputing the claims of colloidal silver but it seemed to be the most accepted. I think it's a great indication of Jones' need for sensationalism in his career. Greatly appreciated comment, especially the abstract. Thanks again.
    -James

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