Disease History of emeralds Egyptians 1650 BC - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

Disease History of emeralds Egyptians 1650 BC

Description:

... Disease History of emeralds Egyptians 1650 BC Austria South Africa Pakistan Columbia and Brazil Afghanistan Ancient Trader ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:48
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: nucleusBi
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Disease History of emeralds Egyptians 1650 BC


1
Chemistry
Elements the Periodic Table
2
Engagement
Green Gold
How Does Your Garden Grow?
3
Engagement
Emeralds
  • Columbia
  • Lake Guatavita
  • Spanish conquest
  • Emerald mines
  • Mythology
  • 60 of the world production

4
Engagement
Emeralds
  • Myths and legends
  • Immortality
  • Power
  • Preservers of chastity
  • Medicinal cures
  • Dysentery
  • Disease

5
Engagement
Emeralds
  • History of emeralds
  • Egyptians ? 1650 BC
  • Austria
  • South Africa
  • Pakistan
  • Columbia and Brazil
  • Afghanistan
  • Ancient Trader
  • Silk Routes from China to Europe
  • Origin of Antique Jewels

6
Engagement
Emeralds A Mineral that Should Not Exist!
  • Valuable
  • Rarer than Diamonds
  • Beryl
  • Beryllium and Aluminum
  • Silicon and Oxygen
  • Bright Green
  • Al replaced by Cr or V
  • Strange?

7
Engagement
Emeraldsa mineral that should not exist
  • Examine the Periodic Table and use it to design
    an explanation for the existence of emeralds.
  • Present your hypothesis on a poster.

8
Engagement
Emeraldsa mineral that should not exist
  • Be, Si and Al and Cr and V
  • Earths formation
  • Molten
  • Si and Al ? surface
  • Fe ? mantle or core
  • Elements
  • Weight
  • Size

9
Engagement
Emeraldsa mineral that should not exist
  • Parting of the elements
  • Surface rocks
  • Crust
  • Felsic
  • Core
  • Mantle
  • Mafic

10
Engagement
Emeraldsa mineral that should not exist
  • Surface rocks ? Be, Si, Al and O
  • Core ? Cr and V
  • How could the elements meet?

11
Engagement
Emeraldsa mineral that should not exist
  • Plate tectonics- forces and uplift
  • Plates collide
  • Patchwork
  • Emerald rain
  • Hot liquid
  • Super-hot mineral laden water
  • Granite juice
  • Fissures

12
Engagement
Emeraldsa mineral that should not exist
  • Gardens
  • Differences
  • Trapped fossil
  • Locations
  • Columbia
  • India
  • Austria
  • Pakistan

13
Engagement
Emeralds where did the jewels originate? HO 4.1
  • Your group has been engaged to trace the history
    of some famous antique jewelry that contains
    emeralds.
  • Use new techniques that were designed by Gaston
    Giuliani at the French Museum of Natural History
    the chemical analysis provided, determine the
    origin of the emeralds in
  • Roman Emerald Earring
  • Indian jewels
  • Holy Crown of France

14
Engagement
Emeralds garden chemical analysis HO 4.1
  • Garden chemistry
  • Columbian emeralds
  • High concentration of sodium chloride
  • Low oxygen isotope ratio
  • Indian emeralds
  • Low concentration of sodium chloride
  • Low oxygen isotope ratio

15
Engagement
Emeralds garden chemical analysis HO 4.1
  • Garden chemistry
  • Austria emeralds
  •  No presence of sodium chloride
  •  High oxygen isotope ratio
  • Afghanistan/Pakistan emeralds
  •  Moderate concentration of sodium chloride
  •  High oxygen isotope ratio

16
Engagement
Emeralds roman earring
  • French Natural History Museum
  • Literature - Austrian mines
  • Data
  •  Moderate concentrations
  • of NaCl
  •  High ratio of O16 to O14

17
Engagement
Emeralds Indian emeralds
  • French Natural History Museum
  • Nizam of Hyderabad
  • Cut in the 18th century
  • Literature Austrian mines

18
Engagement
Emeralds Indian emeralds
  • French Natural History Museum
  • Data 1 1 emerald
  • Moderate concentrations of NaCl
  • High ratio of O16 to O14
  • Data 2 3 emeralds
  • High concentrations of NaCl
  • Low ratio of O16 to O14

19
Engagement
Emeralds Holy Crown of France
  • French Natural History Museum
  • Louis IX 13th century
  • Literature Austrian mines
  • Data
  • No concentrations of NaCl
  • High ratio of O16 to O14

20
Exploration 1
Elements and the Periodic Table HO 4.2
  • Elements from the Periodic Table combine to make
    compounds.
  • Use the Periodic Table and the Ion Cards to
    determine how the elements combine.

21
Exploration 1
Elements and the Periodic Table HO 4.2
Use the Ion Cards to discover the chemical
formulas for the following 10 compounds (Ask
questions for compounds that present a
challenge.)
  • Sodium chloride
  • Magnesium fluoride
  • Sodium hydroxide
  • Lithium cyanide
  • Calcium chloride
  • Lithium oxide
  • Magnesium bromide
  • Potassium permanganate
  • Potassium carbonate
  • Beryllium bromide

22
Exploration 1
Elements and the Periodic Table HO 4.2
  • Develop a set of guidelines for the use of the
    Ion Cards.
  • How do the color combinations align to the
    Periodic Table?

23
Explanation 1
Elements and the Periodic Table HO 4.2
  • Ion Cards
  • Colors ? columns on the Periodic Table
  • Columns ? the size of the cards
  • Size of the Ion Cards ? charge on the ions
  • Outline colors ? the sign on the charge of the
    ions

24
Exploration 2
Elements and the Periodic Table HO 4.3
Using the periodic table provided, arrange your
ion cards so that they resemble the periodic
table.
25
Exploration 2
Elements and the Periodic Table HO 4.3
Use the periodic table and the ion cards to
answer the following questions
  • What type of ions are formed from elements in the
    1st column on the left side of the periodic
    table?
  • What type of ions are formed from the elements in
    the 2nd column on the left of the periodic table?
  • What type of ions are formed from the elements in
    the 7th column on the right side of the periodic
    table?
  • What type of ions are formed from the elements in
    the 6th column on the right side of the periodic
    table?

26
Explanation 2
Elements and the Periodic Table
  • Periodic Table
  • Columns on the Periodic Table ? families of
    elements
  • Elemental families
  • Names
  •  Charges
  • Chemical properties

27
Elaboration
What can the Periodic Table tell me? HO 4.4
  • Procedure
  • Your picture shows one of the 109 elements that
    scientists have discovered. The Periodic Table is
    organized using the boxes and observed patterns
    in the information contained within the box.
  • Each box provides information about
  • Name of the element
  • Symbol for the element
  • Atomic number number of protons
  • Atomic mass number protons and neutrons
  • Average atomic mass weighed average based on
    the abundance of the isotopes of each element in
    nature.

28
Elaboration
Elements and the Periodic Table HO 4.4
  • How many protons are there in your element?
  • If atoms are electrically neutral, how many
    electrons are there in your element?
  • How many neutrons in your element?
  • Using your information from the first
    exploration, what is the charge on your element
    when it becomes an ion?

29
Elaboration
Elements and the Periodic Table HO 4.4
  • How many electrons does your element have when it
    becomes an ion?
  • Arrange the elements within your group in a way
    that shows a pattern.
  • Arrange the elements is your group with the ones
    in the group next to yours. Explain your
    arrangement strategy to the group.
  • Arrange all the elements in the class in at least
    two different ways. Explain your arrangement
    strategy.

30
Explanation 3
Elements and the Periodic Table
  • The Periodic Table is one of the chemists
    most useful tools and provides information about
    each of the elements and how they relate to each
    other.
  • What is a proton?
  • What is a neutron?
  • What is an electron?
  • What is an ion?
  • How does the Periodic Table give us
    information about ion charge and why is ion
    charge important?

31
Explanation 3
Elements and the Periodic Table
  • Purpose
  • Research
  • Education
  • Development of environmental technologies
  • New type of laboratory
  • State of the art systems
  • Mechanical, architectural and computer
    monitoring
  • Experimental project
  • Unexpected
  • Expected

32
Evaluation
Elements the Periodic Table HO 4.5
  • Use the periodic table to complete the
    Evaluation Handout 4.5.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com