Given originally as a substitute for ordinary phosphorus in senile debility, it was found that it was eliminated as amorphous phosphate of lime and that the lime elimination was thereby increased.
Nascher asserts that the phosphorus which is introduced as amorphous phosphorus is excreted as amorphous phosphateof lime within twenty-four hours.
Nascher identify the amorphous phosphate produced by his amorphous phosphorus?
It is true that I have no private mark by which I can identify the amorphous phosphate produced by amorphous phosphorus, but such argument is puerile.
Nor is the amorphous phosphate “always present in alkaline urine.
The specimens of urine were examined in reliable laboratories and I have reports showing acid and neutral urine as well as alkaline urine having the amorphous phosphate precipitate.
The examination, therefore, shows that Sulpho-Lythin is a mixture consisting mainly of sodium sulphate and sodium phosphate and sodium thiosulphate.
Neither is it worth while to discuss the question of a constant occurrence of a sediment of amorphous calcium phosphate in alkaline urine.
Gastrogen Tablets are said to be composed of pepsin, calcium carbonate, calcium phosphate and “aromatics.
Iodia is put on the market by Battle and Company, under the claim that it contains potassium iodid in combination with iron phosphate and vegetable “principles.
Why should the phosphorus introduced take calcium from the phosphate radical with which it is already in combination?
Within a short time valuable phosphate beds, more extensive than any before known to exist in this country, have been discovered in Utah, Wyoming, and Idaho.
Observing that they often contained a shark's tooth or other organic remains, he suspected that they might be composed partly of phosphate of lime.
In 1848 he advocated the use ofphosphate nodules in the "Greensand" beds of Cambridgeshire.
It contains guano deposits, is owned by the Navassa Phosphate Company, and is occupied solely by its employees.
In like manner in the formation of the carbonic acid and the water in the integument, the basis for the formation of phosphate of iron for the muscles may reside.
In the mucous secretion of the intestine the condition, requisite to the formation of phosphate of lime for the bones, probably resides.
Our finest grade of porcelain has little or no phosphate of calcium, or ground bone, in it.
The phosphate of lime that is mixed with the kaolin renders the body of the ware more porous and elastic.
The bone element, or phosphate of lime, as it is more properly termed, imparts both strength and elasticity to the china.
Phosphatization sometimes takes place, amorphous phosphate of lime being substituted for carbonate of lime, and these replacement products often have great value as sources of natural fertilizers.
On ocean rocks in dry climates the droppings of birds (guano) which contain much phosphate, percolating into the underlying limestones change them into a hard white or yellow phosphate rock (e.
In the north of France beds of phosphate are found in the chalk; they occur also in England on a smaller scale.
Calcium phosphateis much employed in treating rickets, and calcium chloride in haemoptysis and haemophylia.
But the banker had sold some village lots to the negroes, and in two instances, where a streak of commercial phosphate had been discovered on the properties, the lots had reverted to the Hooker estate.
There had been in the deed something concerning a mineral reservation that the negro purchasers knew nothing about until the phosphate was discovered.
P is very widely disseminated, but not abundant, and is found only in compounds, the chief of which is calcium phosphate Ca3(PO4)2.
The main sources of phosphates and P are the phosphate beds of South Carolina, the apatite beds of Canada, and the bones of animals.
Your friend, Mr. Gideon Newsome, said something about a rumor of paying phosphate here in the Harpeth bend when I met him over in Boliver before I came to Sweetbriar.
Some time ago a phosphate expert examined these regions, but reported nothing worth working.
He's got to tie down his seat in the state house with a white ribbon, and he's got no mind for fooling with phosphate dirt.
So you only got the phosphate in your examination report of the Alloway place?
He couldn't seem to manage his chicken dumplings for feeding his eyes with Rose Mary, and he didn't have time to give up much information about sech little things as oil-wells and phosphate beds.
A slight excess of phosphate of ammonia aids the crystallisation.
A solution of pure salt is not precipitated by a solution of carbonate of ammonium, followed by a solution of phosphate of sodium; a solution of 9 gr.
If the phosphate examined has been heated to redness before solution, it then, as a metaphosphate, gives a white precipitate with nitrate of silver.
From its being one of the natural constituents of the gastric juice, and from its power of dissolving a considerable quantity of phosphate of calcium, it appears very probable that it may prove beneficial in the above complaints.
Crystals of triple phosphate with spherules of urate of soda.
Besides a little mucus, it contains small quantities of phosphate of lime and chloride of sodium, which, however, do not interfere with its digestive properties, as they are found also in normal gastric juice.
The water employed should be just previously boiled to expel oxygen; the protosulphate of iron should be entirely free from persulphate, and clear crystals of phosphate of soda should be chosen.
The residue is mixed with phosphate of lime or carbonate of zinc, pressed into moulds and dried.
In addition to the river phosphate is a lighter deposit, occurring in a stratum of sand and clay about two feet thick; but this is not so valuable, though it is softer and easier ground.
These give the tribasicphosphate of lime, which results from the application of sulphuric acid to the nodules, a tendency to "go back" to the insoluble condition.
In the two supplemental table cases, 57 A and B, the visitor may notice specimens of Pyromorphite, a combination of phosphate and chloride of lead, and a combination of chloride of calcium with phosphate of lime.
Almost all the hard parts of animals--the bones and so on--are composed chiefly of phosphate of lime and carbonate of lime.
The group consists, in Britain, of sands and clays, sometimes with bands of calcareous grit or siliceous limestone, and occasionally containing concretions of phosphate of lime, which are largely worked for agricultural purposes.
Phosphate of lime, concretions of; disseminated in rocks; origin of.
It also contains a little phosphate of lime, and is largely worked for agricultural purposes.
Phosphate of lime forms the larger proportion of the earthy matters of the bones of Vertebrate animals, and also occurs in less amount in the skeletons of certain of the Invertebrates (e.
Phosphate of Lime is another lime-salt, which is of interest to the palæontologist.
They would learn that there are in the territory included in the drainage basin of the Colorado River unlimited deposits of phosphate rock from which all needed phosphatecould be mined.
To get over this difficulty, calcium phosphate is converted into a mixture known as "superphosphate" by the following process.
In some cases, the residue is then ground up to make bone meal, which is valuable as a manure because of the calcium phosphate which it contains.
Phosphorus is then converted into phosphate and retained by the lining, which is subsequently removed, ground up finely, and sold as "basic slag.
Bone ash or the mineral phosphate is finely ground and thoroughly mixed by machinery with two-thirds its weight of sulphuric acid from the lead chambers.
In this way, the phosphate returns again to the animal kingdom, for it supplies plants with the phosphates that they require, and from the vegetable kingdom it passes to animals and helps to build up bone again.
Next to muscle, cartilage contains the largest amount of the chloride of sodium, and this especially in the temporary cartilages of the fœtus, its place being taken by the phosphate of lime as it approaches the time of birth.
Add the phosphate and crushed ice, stirring all for several minutes.
Any magnesia present in the filtrate of the oxalate of lime is by the addition of a solution of phosphate of soda separated as phosphate of ammonia and magnesia, after having stood twenty-four hours.
Films or stains of glauconite on shells, sand grains and phosphate nodules are explained by a similar deposit of fragmental glauconite.
If, however, its presence is recognized sodium phosphatemay be substituted.
Jessie joined his study workers and she took a class of the awful little children from down in the Settlement beyond the Phosphate Mills, who all smelled terribly.
A precipitate thrown down by boiling and redissolved by nitric acid is probablyphosphate of lime.
Phosphorus may also be given in one-fourth grain doses twice daily, together with a tablespoonful of powdered bone meal or crude calcium phosphate at each meal.
The known results of feeding cattle a generous or forcing ration in which phosphate of lime is present to excess adds additional force to the view just advanced.
If they were really due to guano, how does it happen that the insoluble phosphate of lime should have disappeared, while the easily soluble nitrate of soda should alone be preserved?
The phosphate is everywhere distributed in the soil.
It is important, however, that the general principles underlying the process of manufacture and the chemical changes in the phosphate taking place during the process be clearly understood.
The river phosphate is dredged from the Bull, Coosaw, and Beaufort rivers.
Contrary to what we might expect, this phosphate is less insoluble than the ordinary tribasic or bone phosphate.
In the manufacture of superphosphate the tribasic phosphate is converted into the soluble phosphate--the lime, which was formerly in combination with the phosphoric acid, uniting with the sulphuric acid, and forming gypsum.
Table for conversion of soluble phosphate into insoluble phosphate 399 IV.
We know, however, that when it is brought in contact with the soil-particles, all its soluble phosphate is converted into precipitated phosphate.
It is different entirely with gypsum--which is sulphate of lime--or phosphate of lime, both of which may be safely mixed with sulphate of ammonia without any danger of escape of ammonia.
We have already referred to the reversion of phosphate in the chapter on the Manufacture of Superphosphates.
The phosphate was thoroughly incorporated with the soil just before seeding oats and sweet clover.
This difference in the thickness of stand and the height of plants was so striking that the last round of the phosphate spreader was plainly distinguishable.
Those portions of the fields which received an application of phosphate not only contained many more plants on a given area, but the vigor and growth of the plants were most marked.
It certainly is very remarkable that phosphorus, which, in the form of phosphate of lime, is a very important constituent of bone, should have such an extraordinary effect upon it when received into the system in the manner we have described.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "phosphate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: alcohol; ammonia; beverage; chemical; compost; dressing; drink; dung; manure; muck; nitrate; nitrogen