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Melts In Your Hand, Not In Your Mouth....

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Pillar of the Community
Silverhawk74's Avatar
United States
3670 Posts
 Posted 08/01/2013  10:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Silverhawk74 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
This link here seems to be the best place to buy these rare metals at the lowest wholesale price. And again most of these most rare metals have more of a place in a science lab or product research and development department, but that does not mean one cant invest in them. And you can bet a very low number of the pop buys and invests in such rare metals....

Most of us buy silver and gold and overlook platinum and palladium. Well I can promise you those two markets are great to tap into as very little competition. Try and find abundant 1-10 platinum rounds on ebay, it does not happen. Way scarce shy of 200....

http://www.rotometals.com/99-99-Pur...ice-s/67.htm
Edited by Silverhawk74
08/01/2013 10:57 pm
Pillar of the Community
nalaberong's Avatar
Canada
2805 Posts
 Posted 08/01/2013  10:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add nalaberong to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
I think like this gallium or Rhodium or any of these liquid based metals should be kept in a sealed container always and put it away and forget about it like any pmz.....

Rhodium is a standard platinum group metal with a high melting point, like ruthenium and rhenium. Yes, they're hard to keep track of - but all are rare in the Earth's crust and worth watching (especially because they have a few real applications).
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bekiz's Avatar
Japan
666 Posts
 Posted 08/01/2013  11:00 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bekiz to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
do plutonium and uranium melt in man's hand?
want to see youtube video ))
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allspice's Avatar
Canada
746 Posts
 Posted 08/01/2013  11:01 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add allspice to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I've never heard of gallium staining skin or being toxic, but I have heard that gallium nitrate (a common variant), has anti-inflammatory and anti-bacterial properties. It's used to treat horses for navicular disease. When diluted in distilled water, it is used as a treatment/remedy for arthritis, pain, and even frozen shoulder. It's also used in oral meds & topical creams for arthritis, as well as dental technology. Here's a link to some interesting research:

http://george-eby-research.com/html/arthritis.pdf
Bedrock of the Community
sel_69l's Avatar
Australia
21788 Posts
 Posted 08/01/2013  11:19 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add sel_69l to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Plutonium does NOT melt in your hand. IT melts your hand instead!
ALL isotopes of Plutonium are dangerously radioactive, as well as dangerously poisonous.

Pure U238 reasonably OK, but I would stay from it, because U235 is present with it, in natural occurence.
Uranium mining requires safeguards but is only present in minerals in relatively trace amounts, so that Uranium mining can be comparatively safe.
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publius's Avatar
United States
807 Posts
 Posted 08/01/2013  11:31 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add publius to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
The radioactive element polonium (isotopic weight 210), formed in the same decay chain which produces radium (isotopic weights including 222), is so energetic that even a sample the size of a pinhead generates enough heat to melt itself. Very few substances are so active.
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Silverhawk74's Avatar
United States
3670 Posts
 Posted 08/02/2013  01:20 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Silverhawk74 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Uranium 238 is what they use to make some of the most powerful bombs known to man correct? Via the hydrogen bomb for example....

Most interesting topic these elements of our Universe. They have no mind or conscious but they always were and always will be, even if they change forms many times along the way....

Where as we are all organic and most temporary yet neither would have any significance without the other....

Metals in many forms are the gateway to the advanced technical age, sure the stone and copper age we advanced in many ways and so on, but when did we really excel as a species?

In my opinion it was when we incorporated industry and metals and the assembly lines, and combined that knowledge with all the engineering and mathematical and scientific formulas that countless amounts of smart people who spent their ENTIRE lives studding just working on one tiny piece of the pie/equation. Why, drive something drove them to seek out their destiny....

Humans are as smart a creature that ever crawled out of a hole on any planet in any place or time, but in the end we are masters of the COPY CAT. Everything we say and do is a thought or IDEA of another or others who have all long since died and turned to dust. Its our COLLECTIVE sense of KNOWING to preserve that most cherished information and pass it along to others that are most close to us via our children etc., so as they can pass it on to theirs and so on that makes us so special as a whole....

And with every life, the collective grows stronger. Crazy all this could be so possible in such a chaotic Universe by nature, but for what ever reason that is the crazy world we all share....
Edited by Silverhawk74
08/02/2013 01:27 am
Bedrock of the Community
sel_69l's Avatar
Australia
21788 Posts
 Posted 08/02/2013  02:14 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add sel_69l to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
U235 is the isotope used for the core of atomic weapons, if plutonium is not used.
It needs to be about 85% pure to sustain a runaway chain reaction with sufficient speed, to produce enough heat to initiate the 'secondary' in a thermonuclear device.
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