Basics Of Alchemy
This book is no longer an official textbook for the Hogwarts course, Alchemy 201.
Last Updated
05/31/21
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Chapter 4: Base Metals
Chapter 5
A base metal is a metal
that easily corrodes or oxidises and reacts with hydrochloric acid (HCl). Base
metals tend to be common and relatively inexpensive, which is what makes them
so appealing for use in alchemy. These are the metals that one begins with, and
the hope is that one will successfully transmute their base metal into a noble
metal.
This chapter will look
at some of the important base metals. Please note that these metals are often
found in alloys. An alloy is a combination of metallic elements in order to
create a different metal. An example of this is pewter. Pewter is an alloy that
normally consists of lead, tin, copper, and antimony. Do not confuse a pure
metal with an alloy. This can result in disaster, especially when using magic.
Copper
Melting Point: 1084.5°C
Boiling Point: 2562°C
Density: 8.96 g/cm³
Celestial Body: Venus
Organ: Kidneys
Copper is considered a
base metal, but it is important to note that it does not react with
hydrochloric acid the way the other base metals do. It is used in a variety of
alloys, but two of the most common alloys are brass and bronze. It is also
commonly seen as a component of coins.
Copper was likely
discovered around 9000 BC in the Middle East. Jewelry containing the metal has
been found from near that time period. As time passed the Copper Age gave way
to the Bronze Age, and humans continued to refine their working of copper.
Iron
Melting Point: 1538°C
Boiling Point: 2862°C
Density: 7.87 g/cm³
Celestial Body: Mars
Organ: Gall Bladder
Iron is one of the most
common elements on Earth and is very important to us in a number of ways,
including biology. We know that iron was used as far back as 3500 BC.
Unfortunately, iron corrodes very easily, which has resulted in many older iron
pieces not surviving to the modern age.
Through history, iron
has been used in a variety of ways. Some examples of the way in which iron has
been used include wrought irons, cast iron, and steel. Iron’s numerous uses
have made it a popular material (or made its alloys popular) for everything
from beads to tools to weapons.
Lead
Melting Point: 327.5°C
Boiling Point: 1749°C
Density: 11.36 g/cm³
Celestial Body: Saturn
Organ: Spleen
Lead is one of the
easier metals to manipulate with magic. Lead has been used for thousands of
years by Muggles and wizarding kind alike. It has been turned into lead beads
that have been dated to as far back as 6400 BC, and it has also been used as
currency dated back to 2000 BC and in jewelry and other goods in medieval
Europe. It is still used in the modern day, although its uses are more limited
as we now know that it is poisonous when inhaled or consumed.
One of the greatest
fascinations with lead in alchemy is the possibility of turning it into gold.
Dzou Yen was known to have transmuted lead into gold, and it is likely that the
noted alchemist, Nicholas Flamel, did as well with his Philosopher’s Stone. This
is one case in which Muggle technology has caught up with magic. Through
complicated and expensive science, Muggles can now change lead into gold,
although this is not often done.
Nickel
Melting Point: 1453°C
Boiling Point: 2730°C
Density: 8.9 g/cm³
Celestial Body: N/A
Organ: N/A
Nickel has been seen in
alloys as far back as 3500 BC. It is slow to oxidize at normal room
temperatures and has therefore been used in plating other metals and creating
alloys in order to help maintain a silvery appearance.
Nickel was named in the
18th century by a Swedish wizard, Axel Fredrik
Cronstedt. German miners found an ore that they thought contained copper, but
could not extract any. They began calling this ore Kupfernickel (Kupfer
meaning 'copper' and Nickel being a mischievous spirit in German
mythology). In the 18th century, Cronstedt was trying to get copper
from some Kupfernickel and managed to extract what we now call nickel.
Zinc
Melting Point: 419°C
Boiling Point: 1665°C
Density: 7.134 g/cm³
Celestial Body: N/A
Organ: N/A
Zinc is a very weak
metal and usually a very inexpensive metal. It has been used in alloys since at
least the 10th century BC. One of its most common uses
throughout history is in brass, which is a combination of zinc and copper. It
can also be seen in currency, for example, the American penny is mostly
composed of zinc.
Alchemists have long
enjoyed manipulating zinc. Some examples of their manipulations include heating
it with other metals to create alloys and dissolving it in sodium hydroxide.
Alchemists have also been known to burn zinc metal in the air creating zinc
oxide. When they collected it, it had the appearance of being wooly, so it was
sometimes called Lana Philosophica, or 'philosopher’s wool'. It was also
called Nix Alba, which translates into 'white snow'.