Chemistry : general, medical, and pharmaceutical including the chemistry of the ; a manual on the general principles of the science, and their applications in medicine and pharmacy . med carbon as well as hydrogen and some oxygen it affords power-ful agents termed alkaloids—near relatives of ammonia—while thesame elements otherwise grouped, with sometimes a little sulphur orphosphorus, form the various albumenoid and gelatinous matterscharacteristic of the tissues of animals and vegetables. In a perfectstructure we should perhaps scarcely regard any one element o


Chemistry : general, medical, and pharmaceutical including the chemistry of the ; a manual on the general principles of the science, and their applications in medicine and pharmacy . med carbon as well as hydrogen and some oxygen it affords power-ful agents termed alkaloids—near relatives of ammonia—while thesame elements otherwise grouped, with sometimes a little sulphur orphosphorus, form the various albumenoid and gelatinous matterscharacteristic of the tissues of animals and vegetables. In a perfectstructure we should perhaps scarcely regard any one element ormember. as more important than another, still such a conclusionalmost forces itself upon us as we become acquainted with the chemi-cal history of combined nitrogen. CHLORINE, Source.—This element is a gas. Its chief source is common salt,more than half of which is chlorine. Preparation About a quarter of an ounce of salt and the same amount of black oxide of manganese are mixed, andplaced in a test-tube with sufficient water to cover them ; onadding a small quantity of sulphuric acid, the evolution ofchlorine commences. For mode of collection see following;paragraphs. Fig. 10. Fig.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1, bookdecade1870, booksubjectpharmaceuticalchemistry