Sal$515970$ - traducción al Inglés
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Sal$515970$ - traducción al Inglés

HALIDE MINERAL (IN VERY EARLY TIMES, NAME OF COMMON ROCK SALT FROM NEAR THE ORACLE OF AMMON)
Sal-ammoniac; Sal Ammoniac; Sal armoniac; 🜹; Sal ammoniac; Sal Ammoniaci
  • Sal ammoniac crystal from Ravat Village, [[Tajikistan]]. One of many unusual sal ammoniac crystal specimens found in the area of Ravat Village, near [[Yaghnob River]], where the crystals have grown in a feather-like or three-dimensional arborescent. Size: miniature, 3.3 x 1.4 x 1.4 cm

Sal      
n. sal, mannelijke voornaam, jongensnaam
sal ammoniac         
salmiak, wit zout gebruikt in droge batterijen; systemische verzurend middel dat vroeger werd gebruikt als diuretisch middel en als slijmoplossend middel (Geneeskunde)
sal volatile         
CHEMICAL USED AS LEAVENING AGENT AND SMELLING SALT
Sal volatile; Baker's salt; E503; Baker's ammonia; (NH4)2CO3; Hartshorn salt; Salts of hartshorn; Salt of hartshorn; CH8N2O3
n. geurig zout

Wikipedia

Salammoniac

Salammoniac, also sal ammoniac or salmiac, is a rare naturally occurring mineral composed of ammonium chloride, NH4Cl. It forms colorless, white, or yellow-brown crystals in the isometric-hexoctahedral class. It has very poor cleavage and is brittle to conchoidal fracture. It is quite soft, with a Mohs hardness of 1.5 to 2, and it has a low specific gravity of 1.5. It is water-soluble. Sal ammoniac is also the archaic name for the chemical compound ammonium chloride.

Pliny, in Book XXXI of his Natural History, refers to a salt produced in the Roman province of Cyrenaica named hammoniacum, so called because of its proximity to the nearby Temple of Jupiter Amun (Greek Ἄμμων Ammon). However, the description Pliny gives of the salt does not conform to the properties of ammonium chloride. According to Herbert Hoover's commentary in his English translation of Georgius Agricola's De re metallica, it is likely to have been common sea salt. In any case, that salt ultimately gave ammonia and ammonium compounds their name.

The first attested reference to sal ammoniac as ammonium chloride is in the Pseudo-Geber work De inventione veritatis, where a preparation of sal ammoniac is given in the chapter De Salis armoniaci præparatione, salis armoniaci being a common name in the Middle Ages for sal ammoniac.

It typically forms as encrustations formed by sublimation around volcanic vents and is found around volcanic fumaroles, guano deposits and burning coal seams. Associated minerals include sodium alum, native sulfur and other fumarole minerals. Notable occurrences include Tajikistan; Mount Vesuvius, Italy; and Parícutin, Michoacan, Mexico.