Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year
The Perfect Holiday Gift Gift Now

Arsenic: The "King of Poisons"

Rock&Gem Magazine

|

October 2023

Few things are saddled with darker connotations than arsenic. Used throughout much of history as a human poison, arsenic has become inexorably linked with death.

- By Steve Voynick

Arsenic: The "King of Poisons"

From medieval times through the mid 1800s, members of Europe's ruling classes frequently used arsenic to dispose of one another. Fittingly, arsenic became known as both the "king of poisons" and, wryly, the "poison of kings." In France, arsenic was called "inheritance powder," alluding to its frequent use by impatient heirs to accelerate the demise of family members.

But there is more to arsenic than a sinister image. Specimens of arsenic's two most familiar minerals, realgar and orpiment, are widely collected for their crystalline beauty and bright colors. In powdered form, these same minerals have been used in medicine and as pigments in the celebrated paintings of many European masters.

THE METAL & ITS MINERALS

Elemental arsenic is dark-gray, brittle, and a poor conductor of electricity. As a semimetal, it exhibits both metallic and nonmetallic properties. Ranking 55th in crustal abundance, it is about as common as tin. Although occasionally found free in nature, most arsenic is a component of more than 250 minerals, the most abundant being arsenopyrite (iron arsenic sulfide), which forms opaque, prismatic crystals with a steelgray color and metallic luster.

Next in abundance are red realgar and yellow-orange orpiment. Both these arsenic sulfides crystallize in the monoclinic system; occur in close association, and share similar properties.

MEDICINE AND THE ARTS

MORE STORIES FROM Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

A New Amber Locality Fills a Gap

A sandstone quarry in central Ecuador has yielded the first significant deposit of Mesozoic amber from South America.

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

Did "Left-Handed" Fish Leave Water Earlier than Thought?

Fossil evidence suggests that fish (or \"fishapods\") dragged themselves onto land during the middle Devonian Period.

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

"Lab Quakes” Produce Surprising Results

When faults let loose and earthquakes result, the main effect we mortals experience is the violent shaking.

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

This Egg is No Spring Chicken

How to date a dino egg

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

Have we Already Mined the Critical Minerals We Need

Then why are we throwing them away?!

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

One Toxic Worm

A critter that creates & tolerates orpiment!

time to read

1 min

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

ROCK & GEM FIELD GUIDE: Silver

Silver (Ag) is a native element and one of Earth's most prized precious metals.

time to read

2 mins

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

DINOSAURS OF THE HELL CREEK MUSEUM

In the Badlands of South Dakota, just outside the small town of Belle Fourche—pronounced “Bell Foosh”—a new attraction has taken shape that every dinosaur enthusiast should see. The Dinosaurs of the Hell Creek Museum is part hands-on exhibit, part science center and part active research lab.

time to read

3 mins

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

The Lost Twins of Kongsberg

A Silver Story Resurfaced

time to read

3 mins

January / February 2026

Rock&Gem Magazine

Rock&Gem Magazine

Switzerland's ICE PALACE

Walk Inside a Glacier at The Top of Europe

time to read

7 mins

January / February 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size

Holiday offer front
Holiday offer back