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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: KRO-LAP |
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LANTERNS OF THE DEAD , the architectural name for the small towers in stone, found chiefly in the centre and west of France, pierced with small openings at the top, where a light was exhibited at night to indicate the position of a cemetery. These towers were usually circular, with a small entrance in the lower part giving access to the interior, so as to raise the lamps by a pulley
Charente
series of eight attached semicircular shafts, raised on a pedestal, and is crowned with a conical roof decorated with fir cones; it has only one aperture, towards the main road. Other examples exist at Ciron (Indre) and Antigny (Vienne).187 1: ;It 0muikTik I If ~f 'IC ', :1' I .~T h!C~ J , J 1j, Iy in. u91 111111 iMiliBlbl lllp d ~, ~ `~1 Il t L I III IIItll96 Lantern of the Dead at Cellefrouin ( Charente
. LANTHANUM [symbol La, atomic weight 139o (0=16)1 one of the metals of the cerium group of rare earths. Its name is derived from the Gr. XavOaveiv, to lie hidden. It was first isolated in 1839 by C. G. Mosander from the " cerium " of J. Berzelius
Bull . de la sac. chim., 1874, 21, p. 196) ; and A. v. Welsbach (Monats. f. Chem., 1884, 5, p. 5o8). The metal was obtained by Mosander on heating its chloride with potassium, and by W. F. Hillebrand and T. Norton (Pogg. Ann., 1875, 156, p. 466) on electrolysis of the fused chloride, while C. Winkler (Ber., 189o, 23, p. 78) prepared it by heating the oxide
magnesia
drawn
Lanthanum oxide
heating it may be made to yield the anhydrous salt. Lanthanum nitrate, La(NO3)3.6H20, is obtained by dissolving the oxide in nitric acid. It crystallizes in plates, and is soluble in water and alcohol. Lanthanum carbide, LaC2, is prepared by heating the oxide with carbon in the electric furnace (H. Moissan, Compt. rend., 1896, 123, p. 148). It is decomposed by water with the formation of acetylene, methane, ethylene, &c. Lanthanum carbonate, La2CO3.8H20, occurs as the rare mineral
pink
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