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pencil lead?

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ieatbees | 14:00 Tue 06th Sep 2005 | Phrases & Sayings
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why is the graphite in pencils called lead? were pencils once made of lead?
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I don't know why they were called lead but I do know that pencils have never been made out of lead, always graphite. Lead is poisonous and probably wouldn't leave a very good mark - perhaps the dark, grey, shiny quality of graphite resembled lead and people just assumed??
Before the discovery of graphite, soft metals such as lead were often used for writing. One early name for graphite was 'black lead', and the name 'lead' has remained in use. (According to The Pencil Pages)

The connection between graphite and lead stems from the days of the Roman Empire (and likely before that), when lead rods were used by scribes to write on papyrus. Both graphite and lead leave a gray mark on paper, although graphite is a bit darker. Graphite didn't come into widespread use for writing until after the 1564 discovery of a very pure graphite deposit in Borrowdale, England. At the time, graphite was thought to be a type of lead and consequently was called black lead or plumbago.

Today, graphite and clay are crushed into a fine powder in a rotating drum containing large rocks. Water is added and the mixture is blended for up to three days. The water is pressed out of the mixture, leaving a gray sludge that is air-dried until it hardens.

The dried sludge is ground into a powder, water is added again, and the mixture is blended to form a soft paste. Carbon black may be added to increase the dark-ness of the lead. The paste is extruded through a metal tube to form thin rods that are cut into pencil-length pieces--called leads--that are then dried. The leads are heated in an oven to 1,800 &�F or higher to make them smooth and hard. The ratio of graphite to clay can be adjusted to vary the hardness of the lead: the more clay, the harder the lead; the harder the lead, the less graphite comes off onto the paper, making a lighter line.

Now you know everything.

Today people still use lead pencils, especially for artwork, because like in the past, lead turns extremely black when certain types of mild acids are applied.
Silver, too, but of course silver gets expensive.

There is also another link between lead and graphite.  The Latin root (plumbus) for lead gives us plumber, plumbing and plumb line - all asssociated with lead.  The mineral form of pure graphite looks a lot like lead, though lacking its weight.  An old name for graphite ore was therefore plumbago.  This could therefore explain why materials made from graphite (plumbago) also became known as 'lead'.

You can take a horse to water, but a pencil must be lead!  :o)

the thing that the romans used to write with was called a  - calamus scriptorius -writing reed

calamus is one of the few Latin loan words into Arabic giving us (them) - qalam

er should anyone wonder....

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How come a totally incorrect answer gets 3 stars!?!  :-p 

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