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  1. Glass (26176 bytes)
    37: ...nogenic]]. [[Silver]] compounds (notably [[silver nitrate]]) can produce a range of colors from [[Orange (c...
    115: ...at had become coated with the plastic [[cellulose nitrate]] through laboratory carelessness, and then when ...
  2. Bolivia (30115 bytes)
    67: ...en it lost its seacoast, and the adjoining rich [[nitrate]] fields, together with the port of [[Antofagasta...
    162: ...a's major exports to the United States are tin, [[gold]], [[jewellery]], and [[wood]] products. Its majo...
    176: .... Important [[Archaeology|archaeological]] ruins, gold and silver ornaments, stone monuments, [[ceramics...
    178: ... but unknown [[stonecutter]]s, [[woodcarver]]s, [[goldsmith]]s, and [[silversmith]]s. An important body ...
  3. Desert (21206 bytes)
    100: ...als such as [[gypsum]], salts (including [[sodium nitrate]] and [[sodium chloride]]), and [[borate]]s. The ...
    104: ...in its great abundance of saline minerals. Sodium nitrate has been mined for [[explosive]]s and [[fertilize...
    106: ...ons. [[Sodium carbonate]], [[sulfate]], borate, [[nitrate]], lithium, [[bromine]], [[iodine]], [[calcium]],...
  4. Caesium (11026 bytes)
    26: | align="center" | silvery gold<br>[[Image:Cs,55.jpg|125px|]]
    144: ...'' and [[atomic number]] 55. It is a soft silvery-gold [[alkali metal]] which is one of at least three [...
    149: ... [[yellow]], and [[green]]. This metal is silvery gold in [[color]] and is both soft and ductile. Caesiu...
    176: ...mpounds of caesium are its [[chloride]] and its [[nitrate]]. The price of caesium in 1997 was about $US 30 ...
  5. Aluminium (26079 bytes)
    52: ... is the second most malleable metal (most being [[gold]]) and the sixth most ductile.
    82: ...metal from clay. Therefore, instead of giving the goldsmith the recognition the latter had anticipated, ...
    95: ...for his finest guests. Others had to make do with gold ones). It is therefore comparatively new as an [[...
    158: ...t be prepared. The salts of strong acids, such as nitrate, are stable and soluble in water, forming hydrate...
    163: ... aluminium in oxygen or by heating the hydroxide, nitrate or sulfate. As a [[gemstone]], its hardness is on...
  6. Mercury (element) (24761 bytes)
    5: | colspan="2" align="center" | [[gold]] &ndash; '''mercury''' &ndash; [[thallium]]
    122: | [[gold|<sup>194</sup>Au]]
    129: | [[gold|<sup>195</sup>Au]]
    140: | [[gold|<sup>197</sup>Au]]
    182: ...loy]]s with almost all common metals, including [[gold]], [[aluminium]], and [[silver]], but not [[iron]...
  7. Nitrogen (10073 bytes)
    46: ...powder]], the latter important in [[fertilizer]]. Nitrated organic compounds, such as [[nitroglycerin]] and...
    55: ...gia]]'', celebrated for its ability to dissolve [[gold]].
    70: ...the corresponding salts called [[nitrite]]s and [[nitrate]]s. Nitric acid is one of the few acids stronger ...
    77: ... the soil surface is in the form of nitrate. Soil nitrate is preferentially assimilated by tree roots relat...
    80: Nitrate fertilizer washoff is a major source of ground wa...
  8. Silver (15157 bytes)
    7: ...lign="center" | [[Copper|Cu]]<br/>'''Ag'''<br/> [[Gold|Au]]<br/>&nbsp;<br/>&nbsp;
    140: ...ery ductile and malleable (slightly harder than [[gold]]) univalent [[coinage metal]] with a brilliant w...
    145: ...its [[halogen|halide]] salts, especially [[silver nitrate]], are also widely used in [[photography]] (which...
    166: ...edieval Europe]], it was often more valuable than gold.
    181: ...es of silver are [[copper]], copper-[[nickel]], [[gold]], [[lead]] and lead-[[zinc]] ores obtained from ...
  9. Sulfur (18059 bytes)
    73: ... [[gun powder]] which is a mixture of [[potassium nitrate]] ([[potassium|K]][[nitrogen|N]][[oxygen|O]]<sub>...
    87: ...fide is called [[pyrite]], the so called ''fool's gold''. Interestingly, pyrite can show semiconductor p...
    100: ...in leaching [[gold]].[http://doccopper.tripod.com/gold/AltLixiv.html]
  10. Uranium (27752 bytes)
    183: ...graphy | photographic]] chemicals (esp. [[uranium nitrate]]).
    229: [[Uranyl nitrate]] (UO<sub>2</sub>(NO<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>) is...
    233: ... than [[antimony]], [[beryllium]], [[cadmium]], [[gold]], [[mercury (element)|mercury]], [[silver]], or ...
  11. Chile (39914 bytes)
    64: .... Although the Spanish did not find the extensive gold and [[silver]] they sought, they recognized the a...
    74: ...rthward by almost one-third and acquired valuable nitrate deposits, the exploitation of which led to an era...
    84: ...ises within the [[copper]], [[coal]], [[iron]], [[nitrate]], and [[steel]] industries were [[expropriation|...
    124: ...ains great mineral wealth, primarily copper and [[nitrate]]s. The relatively small Central Valley, which in...
  12. Mineral (10947 bytes)
    44: ...gmite]]s. The carbonate class also includes the [[nitrate]] and [[borate]] minerals.
    56: ...rite]] (iron sulfide - commonly known as ''fools' gold''), [[chalcopyrite]] (copper iron sulfide) and ga...
    62: ... alloys, such as [[electrum]] (a natural alloy of gold and silver), phosphides, silicides, nitrides and ...

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