Dictionary Definition
Noun
1 a heavy reddish mineral consisting of mercuric
sulfide; the chief source of mercury
2 large red-and-black European moth; larvae feed
on leaves of ragwort; introduced into United States to control
ragwort [syn: cinnabar
moth, Callimorpha
jacobeae]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
cinnabar- A deep red mineral, mercuric sulfide, HgS; the principal ore of mercury; such ore used as the pigment vermilion
- a bright red colour tinted with orange.
- cinnabar colour:
Translations
Adjective
cinnabar- of a bright red colour tinted with orange.
Derived terms
See also
Extensive Definition
- For the plant resin, see Dragon's
blood.
- For the moth, see Cinnabar moth.
Cinnabar, sometimes written cinnabarite, is a
name applied to red mercury(II)
sulfide (HgS),
or native vermilion,
the common ore of mercury.
The name comes from the Greek -
"kinnabari" - used by Theophrastus,
and was probably applied to several distinct substances. Other
sources say the word comes from the Persian
zinjifrah, a word of uncertain origin. In Latin it was known as
minium, meaning also "red lead" - a word probably borrowed from
Iberian
(cf. Basque
armineá "cinnabar").
Structure
HgS adopts two structures, i.e. it is dimorphous. The more stable form is cinnabar, which has a structure akin to that for HgO: each Hg center has two short Hg-S bonds (2.36 Å), and four longer Hg---S contacts (3.10, 3.10, 3.30, 3.30 Å). The black form of HgS has the zinc blende structure.Properties
Cinnabar is generally found in a massive, granular or earthy form and is bright scarlet to brick-red in color. It occasionally occurs, however, in crystals with a non-metallic adamantine luster. Cinnabar has a rombohedral bravais lattice, and belongs to the hexagonal crystal system, trigonal division. Its crystals grow usually in a massive habit, though they are sometimes twinned. The twinning in cinnabar is distinctive and forms a penetration twin that is ridged with six ridges surrounding the point of a pyramid. It could be thought of as two scalahedral crystals grown together with one crystal going the opposite way of the other crystal. The hardness of cinnabar is 2 - 2.5, and its specific gravity 8.998.Cinnabar resembles quartz in its symmetry and
certain of its optical characteristics. Like quartz, it exhibits
birefringence. It
has the highest refractive power of any
mineral. Its mean
index
for sodium light is 3.08
Idrija
(Slovenia);
New Idria (California);
Landsberg, near Obermoschel in
the Palatinate;
Ripa, at the
foot of the Apuan Alps
(Tuscany);
the mountain Avala (Serbia); Huancavelica
(Peru);
Terlingua
(Texas); and
the province of Guizhou in China, where fine
crystals have been obtained.
Cinnabar is still being deposited at the present
day from the hot waters of Sulphur
Bank, in California, and Steamboat
Springs, Nevada.
Mining and extraction of mercury
Cinnabar was mined by the Roman Empire
both as a pigment (Vitruvius, DA VII; IV-V) (Pliny, HN; XXXIII,
XXXVI-XLII) and for its mercury content (Pliny HN; XXXIII, XLI),
and it has been the main source of mercury throughout the
centuries. Some mines used by the Romans remain active today.
To produce liquid (quicksilver) mercury, crushed
cinnabar ore is roasted in rotary furnaces. Pure mercury separates
from sulfur in this process and easily evaporates. A condensing
column is used to collect the liquid mercury, which is most often
shipped in iron flasks.
Because of the high toxicity of mercury, both the
mining of cinnabar and refining for mercury are hazardous and
historic causes of mercury
poisoning. In particular, the Romans used convict labor in
their mines as a form of death sentence. The Spanish also used
shorter term convict labor at the Almadén mines,
with a 24% overall fatality rate in one 30 year period.
Abandoned mercury mine processing sites often
contain very hazardous waste piles of roasted cinnabar calcines.
Water runoff from such sites is a recognized source of ecological
damage.
Medicinal use
Much fuss is made about medicinal use of Cinnabar, however Cinnabar has been used over the ages medicinally in the East and the West and its side effects are long known.It is known to be highly toxichttp://physchem.ox.ac.uk/MSDS/ME/mercuric_sulphide.html
- perhaps the first record of this is in the Thoroughly
Revised Materia Medica (1751) and later in the work Harm and
Benefit in the Materia Medica (1893). It is nevertheless used
today (as is arsenic) to
treat certain types of conditions with Western Medical Science
translations approximating somewhere between "insomnia" and
"depression". It is not "using poison to cure poison", as some
claim - such images should be viewed as curious observation, not an
offering for a mechanism of operation.
Modern herbal extracts that contain cinnabar (zhū
shā / 朱沙) should be that obtained after aqueous
tituration to refine the Cinnabar (HgS) away from any Mercury
Oxide (HgO), as it is the water- and gastric-soluble forms of
Mercury which are responsible for its toxicity. The result is
called "Floating Cinnabar" (shuǐ fēi zhū shā / 水飛朱沙), as opposed to
líng shā (靈沙 / lit. "divine sand") or the highly toxic chén shā (辰沙
or 陳沙; lit "Chen sand").
The Harm and Benefit in the Materia Medica notes:
"...should be used unprepared. ... If refined
with fire it is toxic, and taking it has often been fatal."
In Bensky, Clavey & Stöger's Materia Medicas
entry for it, conveniently located at the beginning of the
"Obsolete Substances" section, you will see this expressed in the
modern language of chemistry:
"...completely pure cinnabar (HgS), when heated
in the presence of oxygen, turns into mercury oxide (HgO), which is
soluble in diluted acids such as gastric acid."
Decorative use
Cinnabar has been used for its color in the new world since the Olmec culture. Cinnabar was often used in royal burial chambers during the peak of Mayan civilization. The red stone was inserted into limestone sarcophagi, both as a decoration and, more importantly, to deter vandals and thieves with its well-known toxicity.The most popularly known use of cinnabar is in
Chinese carved lacquerware, a technique
that apparently originated in the Song
Dynastyhttp://www.askasia.org/teachers/images/image.php?no=659.
The danger of mercury poisoning may be reduced in ancient
lacquerware by entraining the powdered pigment in lacquerhttp://www.cst.cmich.edu/users/dietr1rv/cinnabar.htm,
but could still pose an environmental
hazard if the pieces were accidentally destroyed. In the modern
jewelry industry, the toxic pigment is replaced by a resin-based
polymerhttp://en.mimi.hu/jewelry/cinnabar.html
that approximates the appearance of pigmented lacquer.
In the Byzantine
Empire, the Emperor and certain
privileged bishops (such as the Ecumenical
Patriarch and the Archbishop
of Cyprus) were allowed the exclusive right of signing their
names with ink colored vermilion by the addition of
cinnabar.
Other forms of cinnabar
- Hepatic cinnabar is an impure variety from the mines of Idrija in the Carniola region of Slovenia, in which the cinnabar is mixed with bituminous and earthy matter.
- Metacinnabarite is a black-colored form of HgS, which crystallizes in the cubic form.
- Synthetic cinnabar is produced by treatment of Hg(II) salts with hydrogen sulfide to precipitate black, synthetic metacinnabarite, which is then heated in water. This conversion is promoted by the presence of sodium sulfide.
- Hypercinnabar, crystallise in the hexagonal form.
References
External links
See also
cinnabar in Bosnian: Cinabarit
cinnabar in Bulgarian: Цинобър
cinnabar in Catalan: Cinabri
cinnabar in Czech: Cinabarit
cinnabar in Danish: Cinnober
cinnabar in German: Cinnabarit
cinnabar in Estonian: Kinaver
cinnabar in Spanish: Cinabrio
cinnabar in French: Cinabre
cinnabar in Galician: Cinabrio
cinnabar in Italian: Cinabro
cinnabar in Hebrew: צינובר
cinnabar in Latvian: Cinobrs
cinnabar in Lithuanian: Cinoberis
(mineralas)
cinnabar in Hungarian: Cinnabarit
cinnabar in Dutch: Cinnaber
cinnabar in Japanese: 辰砂
cinnabar in Norwegian: Sinober (mineral)
cinnabar in Low German: Cinnabarit
cinnabar in Polish: Cynober (minerał)
cinnabar in Portuguese: Cinábrio
cinnabar in Russian: Киноварь
cinnabar in Simple English: Cinnabar
cinnabar in Slovak: Cinabarit
cinnabar in Slovenian: Cinabarit
cinnabar in Finnish: Sinooperi
cinnabar in Vietnamese: Chu sa
cinnabar in Turkish: Zincifre
cinnabar in Ukrainian: Кіновар
cinnabar in Chinese: 朱砂