INDEX.

Previous
"@public@vhost@g@html@files@33165@33165-h@33165-h-2.htm.html#Page_111" class="pginternal">111
Leonhardt & Co., stilbene dyes, 137
Lightfoot, aniline black, 114
Light oil, 80
Light oils, early uses, 71
Lister, antiseptic surgery, 131
London, coal introduced, 58
London, illuminated by gas, 40
Lucigen burner, 163
Madder, 168
Magdala red, 149
Magenta, history, 89
Malachite green, 102
Manchester brown, 116
Manchester yellow, 142
Mansfield, isolation of benzene, 73
Mansfield’s still, 77
Manures, 66
Marsh gas, 32
Mauve, discovery, 74
Mechanical value of coal, 22
Medlock, magenta process, 90
Methyl chloride, 99
Methylene green, 113
Methyl green, 101
Methyl violet, 98
Mirbane, essence, 74
Murdoch, introduces coal-gas, 40
Naphthalene, annual production, 141
Naphthalene in carbolic oil, 130
Naphthionic acid, 151
Naphthol green, 161
Naphthol orange, 151
Naphthols, 141
Naphthylamines, 142
Natanson, aniline red, 89
Neutral red, 111
Neutral violet, 111
New blue, 161
Nicholson blue, 93
Nicholson, magenta process, 90
Nietzki, azines, 109
Nietzki, Biebrich scarlet, 156
Nietzki, quinone, 191
Night blue, 106
Nigrosine, 121
Nitrification, 66
Nitrobenzene process, 91
Nitrosodimethylaniline, 111
Non-Carboniferous coal, 11
Number of compounds in tar, 81
Old Red Sandstone, coal in, 12
Oligocene brown coal, 12
Orthochromatic plates, 188
Oxazines, 162
Oxide of iron for gas purifying, 44
Paraffin oil and wax, 50
Patent fuel, 178
Perfumes, 185
Perkin, alizarin, 170
Perkin, discovers mauve, 74
Permanence of dyes, THE END.

Richard Clay & Sons, Limited, London & Bungay.


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Footnotes:

[1] “An experiment concerning the Spirit of Coals,” Phil. Trans. (abridged), vol. viii. p. 295.

[2] Report of the Coal Commissioners (1866-71), vol. i.

[3] In a paper read before the Royal Statistical Society by Mr. Price-Williams in 1889, this author points out that, owing to the introduction of the Bessemer process and other economical improvements, the amount of coal used in the iron and steel manufacture had fallen in 1867 to about sixteen and a half per cent. of the total quantity raised.

[4] This remark does not apply to Great Britain; our Excise regulations have practically killed those branches of manufacture requiring the use of pure wood-spirit.

[5] Since the above was written, new synthetical processes for the production of indigo have been made known in Germany by Karl Heumann. Of the commercial aspect of these discoveries it is of course impossible at present to form an opinion.

[6] Since the above was written the continuation of Koch’s researches upon the tubercle bacillus has culminated in the discovery of his now world-renowned lymph for the inoculation of patients suffering from tubercular disease.

[7] In one large factory in Yorkshire there is a set of stills kept constantly at work making pure aniline at the rate of two hundred tons per month. The monthly consumption of coal in this factory is two thousand tons, equal to twenty-four thousand tons per annum.


Transcriber’s Notes:

Punctuation has been corrected without note.

Inconsistencies in spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the original.





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