Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Aluminium" in English language version.
The French chemists have given a new name to this pure earth; alumine in French, and alumina in Latin. I confess I do not like this alumina.
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ignored (help)A Geotrichum-type arthroconidial fungus was isolated by the authors from a deteriorated compact disc found in Belize (Central America)....In the present paper, we report the purification and characterization of an H2O2-generating extracellular oxidase produced by this fungus, which shares catalytic properties with both P. eryngii AAO and P. simplicissimum VAO.See also the abstract of Romero et al. 2007.
Potassium, acting upon alumine and glucine, produces pyrophoric substances of a dark grey colour, which burnt, throwing off brilliant sparks, and leaving behind alkali and earth, and which, when thrown into water, decomposed it with great violence. The result of this experiment is not wholly decisive as to the existence of what might be called aluminium and glucinium
A Geotrichum-type arthroconidial fungus was isolated by the authors from a deteriorated compact disc found in Belize (Central America)....In the present paper, we report the purification and characterization of an H2O2-generating extracellular oxidase produced by this fungus, which shares catalytic properties with both P. eryngii AAO and P. simplicissimum VAO.See also the abstract of Romero et al. 2007.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: aluminen., -ium suffix, aluminum n.
Etymology: < French alumine (L. B. Guyton de Morveau 1782, Observ. sur la Physique 19 378) < classical Latin alūmin-, alūmen alum n.1, after French -ine -ine suffix4.
aluminium n. coexisted with its synonym aluminum n. throughout the 19th cent. From the beginning of the 20th cent., aluminum gradually became the predominant form in North America; it was adopted as the official name of the metal in the United States by the American Chemical Society in 1925. Elsewhere, aluminum was gradually superseded by aluminium, which was accepted as international standard by IUPAC in 1990.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: aluminen., -ium suffix, aluminum n.
Etymology: < French alumine (L. B. Guyton de Morveau 1782, Observ. sur la Physique 19 378) < classical Latin alūmin-, alūmen alum n.1, after French -ine -ine suffix4.
aluminium n. coexisted with its synonym aluminum n. throughout the 19th cent. From the beginning of the 20th cent., aluminum gradually became the predominant form in North America; it was adopted as the official name of the metal in the United States by the American Chemical Society in 1925. Elsewhere, aluminum was gradually superseded by aluminium, which was accepted as international standard by IUPAC in 1990.
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ignored (help)