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- From: vporguen@unlinfo.unl.edu (victor porguen)
- Newsgroups: misc.wanted,sci.chem
- Subject: Re: Seeking Canadian Balsam Oil
- Date: 30 Dec 1992 04:06:04 GMT
- Organization: University of Nebraska--Lincoln
- Lines: 30
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- Message-ID: <1hr77cINNc8@crcnis1.unl.edu>
- References: <1992Dec27.033422.26022@zip.eecs.umich.edu> <1hm0lpINNpb0@crcnis1.unl.edu> <72535@cup.portal.com>
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-
- mmm@cup.portal.com (Mark Robert Thorson) writes:
-
- >There was an article in _National_Geographic_ a year or two ago about the
- >emerald trade, in which cedar oil was revealed as an agent used to
- >enhance natural emeralds. I would suppose that that is what you really
- >want.
-
- Yes, I would say that Cedar Oil is a much more likely candidate
- for this application than Canada Balsam. Cedar Oil is made from
- either Virginia or Texas cedar trees ("Cedar oil Texas" and "Cedar
- Oil Virginiana", in the trade).
-
- But, come to think of it, the reason for this use is the refractive
- index of cedar oil. For this reason, any oily substance with the
- right index and dispersion will probably serve as well.
-
- It should also be noted that Cedar Oil, as used in microscopy, has had
- its index and dispersion adjusted to coincide with that of certain
- optical glasses, by partial evaporation and adjustment via addition
- of castor oil and, perhasp, other additives.
-
- Cedar oil as such is no longer produced for this use in the USA.
- At one time, it was replaced by an oil based on PCBs (polychlorinated
- biphenyls and derivatives). Then PCBs became outlawed and something
- else started to be used instead, I don't know what. My point is:
- those microscopy oils could probably serve just as well to fill the
- cracks in emeralds. And they do not resinize as easily as natural
- cedar oil.
-
-
-