Today's featured article
Heavy metals are metals with relatively high densities, atomic weights, or atomic numbers, depending on the context. They are usually the denser metals in metallurgy, or the metals with higher atomic numbers in physics, whereas chemists distinguish heavy metals by their chemical behaviour. Heavy metals tend to be less chemically reactive than light metals such as sodium, magnesium, and aluminium. The earliest known metals are heavy metals, including common metals such as iron, copper, and tin, and precious metals such as silver, gold, and platinum. Less familiar metals such as gallium, hafnium, and thallium are also heavy metals, as are the essential nutrients iron, cobalt, and zinc. Some are toxic in larger amounts or certain forms (silver and indium, for example); others, like cadmium, mercury, and lead, are highly poisonous. Sources of heavy metal poisoning may include mining and industrial waste, agricultural runoff, occupational exposure, paints and treated timber. Heavy metals are relatively scarce in the Earth's crust, but are present in many manufactured products. (Full article...)
In the news
- Canadian singer, songwriter, and poet Leonard Cohen (pictured) dies at the age of 82.
- A tram derails on the Tramlink in Croydon, London, killing seven people and injuring more than fifty others.
- Donald Trump wins the United States presidential election, while Republicans retain control of the House and the Senate.
- India de-monetises 500- and 1000-rupee bank notes to fight black money issues.
- In baseball, the Chicago Cubs defeat the Cleveland Indians to win the World Series for the first time since 1908.