4.8 • 610 Ratings
🗓️ 10 March 2020
⏱️ 17 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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0:00.0 | Hey, everybody, one quick thing before we get started. We want to know what you think about this series. |
0:06.6 | So please, do us a favor, fill out a quick survey at sciencefriiday.com slash science diction survey. |
0:15.9 | Thanks. Here's the episode. |
0:18.0 | In a storage room in the Netherlands, tucked away inside a wire cage, |
0:23.3 | there's this painting. |
0:26.6 | It's called Christ and the Adulterus. |
0:29.8 | Jesus is cloaked in a simple, deep blue robe, |
0:33.7 | and he stands over a woman whose head is bent. |
0:37.3 | Jesus' eyes are hooded, and he's lifting a single finger. |
0:42.0 | There was a time when it seemed like everyone was talking about this painting. |
0:48.7 | If history had gone differently, it would probably be hanging in a museum right now, |
0:53.9 | instead of collecting dust in the storage room. |
0:57.5 | But there was something about the way that the artist painted those deep blue robes that Jesus was |
1:04.1 | wearing that caused that painting to be sealed up in that wire cage. It was a particular pigment called cobalt blue. |
1:13.7 | And the artist would have cobalt to thank for his downfall and his saving grace. |
1:20.3 | From Science Friday, this is science diction. |
1:23.3 | I'm Johanna Mayer. |
1:24.6 | Today, we're talking about the word cobalt. |
1:43.5 | In the 1500s, German miners encountered a particularly pesky ore. |
1:50.0 | When it came out of the ground, it had this metallic sheen. |
1:54.0 | It was almost glittery. |
1:56.0 | And it looked kind of like silver, which seems like excellent luck. |
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