Black carbon ink

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>

  1. <rdf:RDF>

    1. <skos:Concept rdf:about="http://vocab.getty.edu/aat/300081180">

      1. <skos:prefLabel xml:lang="en">black carbon ink</skos:prefLabel>

      2. <skos:prefLabel xml:lang="nl">zwarte koolstofinkt</skos:prefLabel>

      3. <skos:prefLabel xml:lang="es">tinta de carbón negro</skos:prefLabel>

      4. <skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">carbon black ink</skos:altLabel>

      5. <skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">carbon ink</skos:altLabel>

      6. <skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">ink, black carbon</skos:altLabel>

      7. <skos:broader rdf:resource="http://museovirtualfelixcanada.digibis.com//concepts/48070" />
      8. <skos:note xml:lang="en">A black ink containing powdered carbon pigment, usually lampblack in a dilute aqueous solution of gum or glue. Carbon inks were used in China as early as the 3rd millennium BCE, also found on Egyptian papyrus and medieval manuscripts. Black carbon inks were replaced with iron gall inks in the 12th century. Distinguished from "India ink," which is a dispersion of carbon black in water.</skos:note>

      9. <skos:notation>300081180</skos:notation>

      10. <skos:inScheme rdf:resource="http://museovirtualfelixcanada.digibis.com//schemas/2" />

      </skos:Concept>

    </rdf:RDF>