silver

(noun)

A lustrous, white, metallic element, atomic number 47, atomic weight 107.87, symbol Ag.

Related Terms

  • emulsion
  • emulsions

Examples of silver in the following topics:

  • Silver

    • Dilute silver nitrate solutions and other silver compounds are used as disinfectants and microbiocides.
    • Silver sulfide also forms silver whiskers when silver electrical contacts are used in an atmosphere rich in hydrogen sulfide.
    • Silver chloride (AgCl) is precipitated from solutions of silver nitrate in the presence of chloride ions.
    • Other dangerously explosive silver compounds are silver azide (AgN3), formed by reaction of silver nitrate with sodium azide (NaN3), and silver acetylide, formed when silver reacts with acetylene gas.
    • Silver cyanide solutions are used in electroplating of silver.
  • The Economy and the Silver Solution

    • Proponents of "free silver" believed that the United States economy should be based on silver instead of gold.
    • Supporters of Free Silver were called "Silverites".
    • Everyone agreed that free silver would raise prices.
    • Free silver advocates wanted the mints to accept silver on the same principle, so that anyone would be able to deposit silver bullion at a Mint and in return receive nearly its weight in silver dollars and other currency.
    • The law required the Treasury to buy the silver with a special issue of Treasury Notes that could be redeemed for either silver or gold.
  • Silverties Versus Goldbugs

    • This angered the proponents of monetary silver, known as the silverites.
    • A faction of Republicans from western silver mining regions known as the Silver Republicans endorsed Bryan.
    • Silverites belonged to a number of political parties, including the Silver Party, Populist Party, Democratic Party, and the Silver Republican Party.
    • The Silverites advocated free coinage of silver.
    • Many Silverites were from the West, where silver was mined.
  • Inadequate Currency

    • The Coinage Act of 1873 eliminated the standard silver dollar.
    • They called for the return to pre-1873 laws, which would require the Mint to take all the silver offered it and return it, struck into silver dollars.
    • The profit, or seignorage, from monetizing the silver was to be used to purchase more silver bullion.
    • The silver would be struck into dollar coins, to be circulated or else stored and used as backing for silver certificates.
    • Implementation of the Bland-Allison Act did not end calls for free silver.
  • Metalwork of the Inca

    • The Inca were well-known for their use of gold, silver, copper, bronze, and other metals for tools, weapons, and decorative ornaments.
    • The Inca were well known for their use of gold, silver, copper, bronze, and other metals.
    • Gold and silver were used for ornaments and decorations and reserved for the highest classes of Inca society, including priests, lords, and the Sapa Inca, or emperor.
    • Headdresses, crowns, ceremonial knives, cups, and ceremonial clothing were often inlaid with gold or silver.
    • Discuss the Incan use of copper, bronze, silver, gold, and other metals.
  • Economic Conditions

    • The pragmatic portion of the Populist platform focused on issues of land, railroads, and money, including the unlimited coinage of silver.
    • This angered the proponents of monetary silver, known as the silverites.
    • Free silver advocates wanted the mints to accept silver on the same principle, so that anyone would be able to deposit silver bullion at a Mint and in return receive nearly its weight in silver dollars and other currency.
    • It was the currency question, however, pitting advocates of silver against those who favored gold, that soon overshadowed all other issues.
    • Agrarian spokesmen in the West and South demanded a return to the unlimited coinage of silver.
  • History of Photography

    • He used paper or white leather treated with silver nitrate.
    • Niépce had previously experimented with paper coated with silver chloride.
    • More interested in silver-based processes than Niépce had been, Daguerre experimented with photographing camera images directly onto a silver-surfaced plate that had been fumed with iodine vapor, which reacted with the silver to form a coating of silver iodide.
    • A strong hot solution of common salt served to stabilize or fix the image by removing the remaining silver iodide.
    • Paper with a coating of silver iodide was exposed in the camera and developed into a translucent negative image.
  • Mycenaean Metallurgy

    • A variety of gold and silver drinking cups have also been found in these grave shafts.
    • A silver rhyton called the Silver Siege Rhyton was likely used for ritual libations.
    • The Silver Siege Rhyton is unique for its depiction of a siege.
    • The rhyton consists primarily of silver with gold-leaf accents.
    • Bronze with gold, silver, and niello inlay. c. 16th century BCE.
  • The Economy Under the Ming Dynasty

    • Minor coins were minted in base metals, but trade mostly occurred using silver ingots.
    • The problem was met through smuggled, then legal, importation of Japanese silver (mostly through the Portuguese and Dutch) and Spanish silver from Potosí carried on the Manila galleons.
    • Provincial taxes were required to be paid in silver in 1465; the salt tax, in 1475; and corvée exemptions, in 1485.
    • The dramatic spike in silver's value in China made payment of taxes nearly impossible for most provinces.
    • Excessive luxury and decadence marked the late Ming period, spurred by the enormous state bullion of incoming silver and by private transactions involving silver.
  • Fall of the Ming Dynasty

    • Meanwhile, Philip IV of Spain (r. 1621–1665) began cracking down on illegal smuggling of silver from Mexico and Peru across the Pacific towards China, in favor of shipping American-mined silver directly from Spain to Manila.
    • However, the greatest stunt to the flow of silver came from the Americas, while Japanese silver still came into China in limited amounts.
    • These events occurring at roughly the same time caused a dramatic spike in the value of silver and made paying taxes nearly impossible for most provinces.
    • People began hoarding precious silver as there was progressively less of it, forcing the ratio of the value of copper to silver into a steep decline.
    • For peasants this was an economic disaster, since they paid taxes in silver while conducting local trade and selling their crops with copper coins.
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