The A to Z Challenge – B is for Baghdad Battery

The A to Z Challenge is on! Hello and welcome to my Main blog. My name is Rose Anderson and I’m a romance novelist. Join me and more than 2279 bloggers and authors as we blog the alphabet throughout the month of April. My daily posts will be mostly history with some science topics here and there. I’ve chosen subjects that tickle my fancy. I hope you will find them interesting too.


Keep the topic rolling! If you have comments or questions, add them at the end of the post. I may not know the answer off the top of my head but I love research and would enjoy discussing my topics further. Comments can be made just below my bio in the tag section.


*FREE* If you enjoy reading scorching romances with unique twists and characters full of personality and depth, scroll down for a free chapter sampler. Find my book trailers in the tabs above.


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Today’s Calliope’s Writing Tablet post is brought to you by the letter B ~

B for Baghdad Battery


One of the more unusual artifacts discovered on an archaeological dig turned up approximately 20 miles outside of Baghdad, Iraq in 1936. At first glance the finds appeared to be simple clay jars with iron lids and asphalt seals. They stood several inches tall and each had a copper tube with an inserted iron rod down the center. No one gave them much attention at the time.


Three years later, German archaeologist Wilhelm Konig was rooting around the stored antiquities in the National Museum of Iraq. Upon finding these odd vessels he drew a rather startling conclusion. The jars looked like galvanic cells — in other words — batteries.  Residue showed the jars had held slightly acidic liquid.. perhaps wine, vinegar, or citrus juice. The different metals involved would react to the acid and produce a mild electric current. Reconstruction of this odd device proves it generates a current between 0.4 and 1.9 volts.


There is some speculation among people who study such things that the Baghdad batteries could have been use medicinally for pain relief in the same manner electrical current is used today. Another opinion suggests they were used for electroplating. Whatever these inventions were used for, their modern counterpart didn’t come about until 2000 years later.


This explains a likely use for the Baghdad battery.


This offers a peek into the battery assembly should you care to make one

yourself. How cool is that?


 


Tomorrow ~ letter C!


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Join me on my satellite blog April 7th – 12thAuthors_in_Bloom-300x250 http://calliopeswritingtablet.blogspot.com/

Authors’ lives outside of the books we write can be as interesting as the worlds we create. One of the more unusual things my husband and I have done was lead wild foods programs for Chicago’s Field Museum. For this event I’ll be sharing my recipes. I hope you stop by. You may have delicious ingredients waiting in your backyard. :)


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I’m winding down on the 100 Things Blogging Challenge!

For nearly 100 days, 002xbqkt
I’ve post something from my chosen topic: Words on the Verge of Extinction. There are 10 entries to come.


Here’s one for today:


Gardeviance (noun 1459 -1706)

~ chest for valuables; a traveling trunk


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4 Us icon See what’s happening on the RB4U blog today

http://romancebooks4us.blogspot.com/


Our April contest is on. We’ll have 3 winners and a lot of prizes to split among them. http://www.romancebooks4us.com/


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Love Waits in Unexpected Places -

Scorching Samplings of Unusual Love Stories


https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/333971

Download your copy of my free chapter sampler! all7books-small


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Published on April 02, 2014 04:49
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