Jump to content

Cinnebar: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
m +{{Redirect category shell}} for multiple-{{R}} #Rs using AWB
 
(18 intermediate revisions by 15 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT [[Cinnabar]]
[[CINNEBAR]]
''What is Cinnebar?'' It is NOT the Mineral Cinnabar!!! (Cinnabar is mercury in one of it's natural forms, specifically red mercuric sulfide. It was used as a colorant by the natives for paint. Cinnabar is Mercuric Sulfide, HgS. Cinnabar is a sort of rusty red material, soft rock. If you ever want to test to see if a rock is Cinnabar, simply heat it. Hold it over a cigarette lighter. If it is not too big of a piece, after heating, you will be able to see tiny droplets of metallic mercury on the heated surface.)


{{Redirect category shell|1=
Now back to CINN[[E]]BAR...
{{R from misspelling}}

{{R with history}}
Cinnebar is from the Cinnebar Tree which grows in Southeast Asia. The Cinnebar beads, boxes and accessories that one can buy these days are made by pressing a pattern into the wood and then the color is enhanced with a resin to give it stability as the wood is very soft.
}}

[[Image:Example.jpg]]

Latest revision as of 05:35, 12 June 2017

Redirect to: