News5 mins ago
Where do we get mercury from?
And what form is it when we obtain it?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Theranged. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
I remember an early science class as a kid in 1972 when the teacher demonstrated how sodium liberated hydrogen from water. After a few pieces there was an explosion that sent glass and sodium hydroxide solution flying across the room. No shielding at all from the class and it was fortunate nobody was hurt.
The teacher turned to the class as white as a ghost and tried to claim that he had done that intentionally as a demonstration of how dangerous it could be in chemistry. Yeah sure.
Students were sent to the store room to bring back a big bottle of mercury. Another guy I met one told me how he had stolen some and how funny it was to put some mercury inside his bottom lip and shake his head around.
We burnt magnesium in near pure oxygen and were told to look at it really quickly and look away. No protective glasses for anyone.
We were shown how to waft ammonia fumes and smell them. That stopped when one student took in too much and passed out cold onto the floor.
Another teacher walked into class on day and pulled out an unshielded sample of radioactive Strontium 90 from his shirt pocket and passed it around the room for us to look at then watch it send the geigercounter clicking wildly.
The teacher turned to the class as white as a ghost and tried to claim that he had done that intentionally as a demonstration of how dangerous it could be in chemistry. Yeah sure.
Students were sent to the store room to bring back a big bottle of mercury. Another guy I met one told me how he had stolen some and how funny it was to put some mercury inside his bottom lip and shake his head around.
We burnt magnesium in near pure oxygen and were told to look at it really quickly and look away. No protective glasses for anyone.
We were shown how to waft ammonia fumes and smell them. That stopped when one student took in too much and passed out cold onto the floor.
Another teacher walked into class on day and pulled out an unshielded sample of radioactive Strontium 90 from his shirt pocket and passed it around the room for us to look at then watch it send the geigercounter clicking wildly.
-- answer removed --