Affluent Savvy
Photo: J Lee
Osmium, rhodium and iridium are probably the rarest metals found in the Earth's crust with average concentrations of 0.0001, 0.0002 and 0.0003 parts per million by weight respectively.
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Learn More »The collections at the Natural History Museum contains concentrates of palladium (Pd), platinum (Pt), osmium (Os) and iridium (Ir) – which are probably linked to some of the earliest work including the discovery of these elements by Wollaston and Tennant in the early 1800s. These are currently being investigated by our curators to determine how these samples came to the collection and how historically significant they really are. Osmium, rhodium and iridium are probably the rarest metals found in the Earth’s crust with average concentrations of 0.0001, 0.0002 and 0.0003 parts per million by weight respectively. These very rare metals are now very important industrially and command very high prices with rhodium the highest priced metal at more than twice the value of gold. Since the initial discovery of these ultra-rare platinum-group metals, research into the NHM’s collections using state-of-the-art analysis still occasionally yields new minerals containing such rare elements. The elusive elements rhodium and iridium were found in a mineral hiding in the collection in 1983 by the NHM researcher, Alan Criddle. Alan named this mineral bowieite after Stanley Bowie, former assistant director of what is now the British Geological Survey, and the specimen in the NHM collection in which it was discovered now becomes the ‘type specimen’ (the definitive scientific reference specimen) for all other research that follows, whether in the Museum, universities, research institutes or industry.
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Large amounts can be described as sizable, substantial, hefty, or considerable. Nov 9, 2022
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