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53 Bull. Pan Am. Union 29 (1921)
The Source of Radium

handle is hein.journals/bulpnamu53 and id is 55 raw text is: 






THE SOURCE OF RADIUM


                        By HAMILTON FOLEY.
 WHEN $100,000 is raised by popular subscription in all
           parts of the country to pay for a thimbleful of radium
           to be presented by the President of the United States
           at the White I-louse to Madam Curie, the discoverer of
 radium, as a gift-from the women of America, the story of how this
 material is obtained, why this material has such a high value, and
 what makes it, of present and of future importance to the civilization
 of the world can not be without interest, even to the non-technical
 reader of the BULLETIN.  Moreover, just how  the United States
 became the foremost radium-producing country, and how  it owes
 this preeminence to the work of one man, Joseph M. Flannery, of
 Pittsburgh, as distinctly as France owes to Madam Curie the honor
 of first making radium known to the world, are details that make an
 interesting chapter in the history of the development of America's
 natural resources. That Mr. Flannery gained much of the mining
 experience and no small part of the money he put into his production
 of radium, while developing the vanadium deposits of the Peruvian
 Andes, is a detail that will be of direct present interest to Hispanic
 America and  of permanent interest in the full story of how the
 greatest supply of radium was made available for the benefit of the
 world.
 In   1895, soon after the discovery of the X rays, Prof. Henri
 Becquerel, of the University of Paris, undertook an exhaustive study
 to ascertain whether some metals after exposure to sunlight would
 shine when brought into a dark room and, if they did, whether that
 light would, like the newly discovered X rays, have the power to
 pass through heavy and light proof paper. By good fortune Prof.
 Becquerel used some uranium in these studies. and quite by acci-
 (lent he found that this uranium was sending forth rays that appeared
 to act as the X rays in penetrating both thick and thin proof paper
 and, after such penetration, to affect a photographic plate as sun-
 light does. He found that his uranium did this whether or not it
 was first exposed to sunlight: in other words, that the sunlight
 could not in any way be said to be the cause of these rays.
 Now,   uranium had  been known  to the world for over a hundred
 years, but that it possessed the power to emit, rays of this penetrating
nature was something  as new as astonishing. For years uranium
had been used to color glass, especially the fine qualities that consti-
tute much of the specialized handiwork of the glassmakers of Bohemia.
     511501-21-Bull. 1-3                                29

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