Page images
PDF
EPUB

from the rhombohedral and the square prismatic, we are not led to distinguish the latter two from each other; inasmuch as they have no optical difference of character. But this distinction is quite essential in crystallography; for these two systems have faces formed by laws as different as those of the other two systems.

Moreover, Weiss and Mohs not only divided crystalline forms into certain classes, but showed that by doing this, the derivation of all the existing forms from the fundamental ones assumed a new aspect of simplicity and generality; and this was the essential part of what they did.

On the other hand, I do not think it is too much to say as I have elsewhere said that "Sir D. Brewster's optical experiments must have led to a classification of crystals into the above systems, or something nearly equivalent, even if crystals had not been so arranged by attention to their forms."]

Many other most curious trains of research have confirmed the general truth, that the degree and kind of geometrical symmetry corresponds exactly with the symmetry of the optical properties. As an instance of this, eminently striking for its singularity, we may notice the discovery of Sir John Herschel, that the plagihedral crystallization of quartz, by which it exhibits faces twisted to the right or the left, is accompanied by right-handed or left-handed circular polarization respectively. No one acquainted with the subject can now doubt, that the correspondence of geometrical and optical symmetry is of the most complete and fundamental kind.

[2nd Ed.] [Our knowledge with respect to the positions of the optical axes of the oblique prismatic crystals is still imperfect. It appears to be ascertained that, in singly oblique crystals, one of the axes of optical elasticity coincides with the rectangular crystallographic axis. In doubly oblique crystals, one of the axes of optical elasticity is, in many cases, coincident with the axis of a principal zone. I believe no more determinate laws have been discovered.]

Thus the highest generalization at which mathematical crystallographers have yet arrived, may be considered as fully established; and the science of Crystallography, in the condition in which these place it, is fit to be employed as one of the members of Mineralogy, and thus to fill its appropriate place and office.

2

Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences, B. viii. C. iii. Art. 3.

CHAPTER VI.

CORRECTION OF THE LAW OF THE SAME ANGLE FOR THE SAME SUB

DISCOV

STANCE.

ISCOVERY OF ISOMORPHISM. MITSCHERLICH.-The discovery of which we now have to speak may appear at first sight too large to be included in the history of crystallography, and may seem to belong rather to chemistry. But it is to be recollected that crystallography, from the time of its first assuming importance in the hands of Haüy, founded its claim to notice entirely upon its connexion with chemistry; crystalline forms were properties of something; but what that something was, and how it might be modified without becoming something else, no crystallographer could venture to decide, without the aid of chemical analysis. Hauy had assumed, as the general result of his researches, that the same chemical elements, combined in the same proportions, would always exhibit the same crystalline form; and reciprocally, that the same form and angles (except in the obvious case of the tessular system, in which the angles are determined by its being the tessular system,) implied the same chemical constitution. But this dogma could only be considered as an approximate conjecture; for there were many glaring and unexplained exceptions to it. The explanation of several of these was beautifully described by the discovery that there are various elements which are isomorphous to each other; that is, such that one may take the place of another without altering the crystalline form; and thus the chemical composition may be much changed, while the crystallographic character is undisturbed.

This truth had been caught sight of, probably as a guess only, by Fuchs as early as 1815. In speaking of a mineral which had been called Gehlenite, he says, "I hold the oxide of iron, not for an essential component part of this genus, but only as a vicarious element, replacing so much lime. We shall find it necessary to consider the results of several analyses of mineral bodies in this point of view, if we wish, on the one hand, to bring them into agreement with the doctrine of chemical proportions, and on the other, to avoid unnecessarily splitting up genera." In a lecture On the Mutual Influence of

Chemistry and Mineralogy,' he again draws attention to his term vicarious (vicarirende), which undoubtedly expresses the nature of the general law afterwards established by Mitscherlich in 1822.

But Fuchs's conjectural expression was only a prelude to Mitscherlich's experimental discovery of isomorphism. Till many careful analyses had given substance and signification to this conception of vicarious elements, it was of small value. Perhaps no one was more capable than Berzelius of turning to the best advantage any ideas which were current in the chemical world; yet we find him, in 1820, dwelling upon a certain vague view of these cases,—that "oxides which contain equal doses of oxygen must have their general properties common;" without tracing it to any definite conclusions. But his scholar, Mitscherlich, gave this proposition a real crystallographical import. Thus he found that the carbonates of lime (calespar,) of magnesia, of protoxide of iron, and of protoxide of manganese, agree in many respects of form, while the homologous angles vary through one or two degrees only; so again the carbonates of baryta, strontia, lead, and lime (arragonite), agree nearly; the different kinds of felspar vary only by the substitution of one alkali for another; the phosphates are almost identical with the arseniates of several bases. These, and similar results, were expressed by saying that, in such cases, the bases, lime, protoxide of iron, and the rest, are isomorphous; or in the latter instance, that the arsenic and phosphoric acids are isomorphous.

Since, in some of these cases, the substitution of one element of the isomorphous group for another does alter the angle, though slightly, it has since been proposed to call such groups plesiomorphous.

This discovery of isomorphism was of great importance, and excited much attention among the chemists of Europe. The history of its reception, however, belongs, in part, to the classification of minerals; for its effect was immediately to metamorphose the existing chemical systems of arrangement. But even those crystallographers and chemists. who cared little for general systems of classification, received a powerful impulse by the expectation, which was now excited, of discovering definite laws connecting chemical constitution with crystalline form. Such investigations were soon carried on with great activity. Thus, at a recent period, Abich analysed a number of tessular minerals, spinelle, pleonaste, gahnite, franklinite, and chromic iron oxide; and

[blocks in formation]

Essay on the Theory of Chemical Proportione, p. 122.

seems to have had some success in given a common type to their chemical formulæ, as there is a common type in their crystallization.

[2nd Ed.] [It will be seen by the above account that Prof. Mitscherlich's merit in the great discovery of Isomorphism is not at all narrowed by the previous conjectures of M. Fuchs. I am informed, moreover, that M. Fuchs afterwards (in Schweigger's Journal) retracted the opinions he had put forward on this subject.]

Dimorphism.-My business is, to point out the connected truths which have been obtained by philosophers, rather than insulated difficulties which still stand out to perplex them. I need not, therefore, dwell on the curious cases of dimorphism; cases in which the same definite chemical compound of the same elements appears to have two different forms; thus the carbonate of lime has two forms, calespar and arragonite, which belong to different systems of crystallization. Such facts may puzzle us; but they hardly interfere with any received general truths, because we have as yet no truths of very high order respecting the connexion of chemical constitution and crystalline form. Dimorphism does not interfere with isomorphism; the two classes of facts stand at the same stage of inductive generalization, and we wait for some higher truth which shall include both, and rise above them.

[2nd Ed.] [For additions to our knowledge of the Dimorphism of Bodies, see Professor Johnstone's valuable Report on that subject in the Reports of the British Association for 1837. Substances have also been found which are trimorphous. We owe to Professor Mitscherlich the discovery of dimorphism, as well as of isomorphism and to him also we owe the greater part of the knowledge to which these discoveries have led.]

CHAPTER VII.

ATTEMPTS TO ESTABLISH THE FIXITY OF OTHER PHYSICAL PROPERTIES.- -WERNER.

THE

HIE reflections from which it appeared, (at the end of the last Book,) that in order to obtain general knowledge respecting bodies, we must give scientific fixity to our appreciation of their properties, applies to their other properties as well as to their crystalline

form. And though none of the other properties have yet been referred to standards so definite as that which geometry supplies for crystals, a system has been introduced which makes their measures far more constant and precise than they are to a common undisciplined

sense.

The author of this system was Abraham Gottlob Werner, who had been educated in the institutions which the Elector of Saxony had established at the mines of Freiberg. Of an exact and methodical intellect, and of great acuteness of the senses, Werner was well fitted for the task of giving fixity to the appreciation of outward impressions; and this he attempted in his Dissertation on the external Characters of Fossils, which was published at Leipzig in 1774. Of the precision of his estimation of such characters, we may judge from the following story, told by his biographer Frisch. One of his companions had received a quantity of pieces of amber, and was relating to Werner, then very young, that he had found in the lot one piece from which he could extract no signs of electricity. Werner requested to be allowed to put his hand in the bag which contained these pieces, and immediately drew out the unelectrical piece. It was yellow chalcedony, which is distinguishable from amber by its weight and coldness.

The principal external characters which were subjected by Werner to a systematic examination were color, lustre, hardness, and specific gravity. His subdivisions of the first character (Color), were very numerous; yet it cannot be doubted that if we recollect them by the eye, and not by their names, they are definite and valuable characters, and especially the metallic colors. Breithaupt, merely by the aid of this character, distinguished two new compounds among the small grains found along with the grains of platinum, and usually confounded with them. The kinds of Lustre, namely, glassy, fatty, adamantine, metallic, are, when used in the same manner, equally valuable. Specific Gravity obviously admits of a numerical measure; and the Hardness of a mineral was pretty exactly defined by the substances which it would scratch, and by which it was capable of being scratched.

Werner soon acquired a reputation as a mineralogist, which drew persons from every part of Europe to Freiberg in order to hear his lectures; and thus diffused very widely his mode of employing external characters. It was, indeed, impossible to attend so closely to

VOL. II.-22.

1 Werner's Leben, p. 26.

« PreviousContinue »