Rojo de plomo
- Ficha
- SKOS
<rdf:RDF>
<skos:Concept rdf:about="http://vocab.getty.edu/aat/300013647">
<skos:prefLabel xml:lang="en">red lead (pigment)</skos:prefLabel>
<skos:prefLabel xml:lang="nl">rood lood</skos:prefLabel>
<skos:prefLabel xml:lang="de">Bleimennige</skos:prefLabel>
<skos:prefLabel xml:lang="es">rojo de plomo</skos:prefLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">lead, red (pigment)</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">lead tetroxide</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">orange lead</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">burnt white lead</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">mineral red</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">mineral orange</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">orange mineral</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="es">tetróxido de plomo</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="zh">ch'ien tan</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">false sandarach</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="la">minium secondarium</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">Paris red</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="la">plumbous plumbate</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">saturine red</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">Saturn red</skos:altLabel>
<skos:altLabel xml:lang="la">secondarium minium</skos:altLabel>
- <skos:broader rdf:resource="http://museovirtualfelixcanada.digibis.com//concepts/47620" />
<skos:note xml:lang="en">Heavy, opaque, orange-red pigment composed of lead tetroxide. Although chemically equivalent to the mineral minium, red lead pigment has been synthetically prepared by roasting lead white (480 C) since before the 5th century BCE. Red lead has been found as a pigment on early objects from Egypt, China, Japan, India, Persia, and Rome; it is no longer used as an artists color because is has poor light stability and poor working properties, although it is still used to color glass and ceramic glazes. Pliny called it "secondarium minium." It was widley used in illuminated manuscripts, and with its use, the term "miniare" came to mean "to color with red lead," giving rise to the term "miniature." Red lead paint was used as an anticorrosion primer for structural iron and steel until the late 20th century.</skos:note>
<skos:notation>300013647</skos:notation>
- <skos:inScheme rdf:resource="http://museovirtualfelixcanada.digibis.com//schemas/2" />
</skos:Concept>
</rdf:RDF>
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>