I love arrowheads, especially obsidian ones...in 7th grade we went to a Native American historical preservation, there was an older man sitting at a table making an arrowhead out of obsidian with a couple pieces of leather and antler. Me and a bunch of kids started watching him, and they all eventually went to look at other things, but I stood there and watched him the entire time...I dont remember either of us saying a word to each other other than hello. He was finishing it as our field trip was ending, he glanced around, wrapped it in a piece of paper and handed it to me and just said 'shhh'. I gently stuffed it in my pocket and proceeded to hold the biggest secret of my life the entire bus ride back to school, the last hour of school, and the bus ride home before I could have a little freak out about him giving it to me. I pulled it out of my pocket, unwrapped it and marveled at it, it was huge, and sharp, and you could see right through it, totally blew my mind. That was nearly 30 years ago, I still have it, wrapped up safely in a box that I open occasionally when nostalgia gets the better of me. ...now if you'll excuse me, theres a box I need to look at...
@brokenacoustic
Жыл бұрын
I found it, then recorded it, then wrote a song for it, then recorded it, then mixed them, then uploaded it, now I'm posting it...thanks Cody! lol
@Gabriel-nf8eb
Жыл бұрын
That's really cool!
@christianterrill3503
Жыл бұрын
There is a guy on KZread that does that for videos. All different styles of flint napping
@brokenacoustic
Жыл бұрын
@@Gabriel-nf8eb Thanks, it was definitely one of the better moments of schooling lol
@brokenacoustic
Жыл бұрын
@@christianterrill3503 Yeah I've watched a few, I've got obsidian and flint, but have yet to give it a try. One of these days...
@bairnonessie Жыл бұрын
"No! Don't lower me in the acid!...blerglglg"
@tau9632
Жыл бұрын
Hahahah yeah I loved that
@FishPit
Жыл бұрын
I almost choked on my food. Ahahah
@CaveChronicles
Жыл бұрын
Hello, how are you? I am under the water. Ululululu
@mikeh4271
Жыл бұрын
I came here to make that same quote. Lol!
@barszczykczerwony176
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that's going to be memed to oblivion
@666kaamos666 Жыл бұрын
Every chemistry teacher in the history of mankind: "Always pour acid into water" Cody: "Don't tell me how to live my life"
@mariohendriks1
Жыл бұрын
I once poured water into oleum. It was quite an exciting experience.
@indigo_carmine
Жыл бұрын
to be honest you should be ok unless you work with oleum or fuming nitric acid.
@hammerfix7241
Жыл бұрын
why?
@AkiSan0
Жыл бұрын
unless its highly concentrated and a medium to high amount of acid, nothing much happens except for mostly a slight rise in temperature. try that with a lot of oleum and its a different story...
@lajoswinkler
Жыл бұрын
Every good chemist knows it only applies for few acids like concentrated sulfuric, perchloric, oleum. It's perfectly useless rule for other acids. Nothing will happen if you pour water into concentrated nitric or acids made from hydrohalogenides.
@rockbutcher Жыл бұрын
We used to use HF to dissolve quartz that held lode gold nuggets to improve the specimens. Scary stuff even for a Geochemist. We didn't dilute ours though so it worked faster and we could direct it where we wanted rather than just dunking the whole chunk. In regard to your results, you need to remember that while Chert and Agate are primarily composed of quartz (a silicate mineral), Obsidian is simply rapidly cooled lava which contains many minerals other than silicates and those would resist the acid.
@nunyabisnass1141
Жыл бұрын
Im terrified to touch the stuff, so i would probably just use hot sodium hydroxide.
@HESDONEIT
Жыл бұрын
fellas he's literally named rockbutcher, i'd trust him
@teeanahera8949
7 ай бұрын
Do you seriously think you can give Cody a lesson in geology. Hilarious.
@rockbutcher
7 ай бұрын
@@teeanahera8949 Given that I have been a Geologist for longer than Cody has been walking? Yes I do.
@seeharvester
2 ай бұрын
Did you ever dissolve any claim-jumpers?
@dwaynezilla Жыл бұрын
Cody is exactly the kind of person I would expect to have a (maybe) 14-year-old bottle of HF just lying around like it's no big deal.
@Fabi33677 Жыл бұрын
they do something similar for fishing hooks. Sometimes you will find written on the packaging "chemically sharpened"
@SpaghettiEnterprises
Жыл бұрын
Same deal with a lot of college students
@duncanfox7871 Жыл бұрын
Other comments talking about how dangerous 50% HF is. Me over here just glad he wore gloves when pouring it this time
@FirstLast-gw5mg Жыл бұрын
Hydrofluoric acid is high on my list of things that I don't want to play with.
@ex5080
Жыл бұрын
Probably a smart idea
@huathai8204
Жыл бұрын
Next on Cody's list chlorine trifluoride aka "human kryptonite"...
@VincentGroenewold
Жыл бұрын
I did in my scientific career, boy did I take precautions. I also played with a solution that had the warning not to breath any vapor in or spill whatever, it would rupture my red blood cells immediately and I would suffocate. Joy :)
@sanityormadness
Жыл бұрын
Next time: Can you swim in mercury? "Of course, the greatest problem is the density of mercury makes it incredibly difficult to immerse yourself. This is why I'm going to be wearing these uranium waders..."
@Karreth
Жыл бұрын
Cody has done the floating in mercury video already, actually. He wore boots, though.
@sean..L Жыл бұрын
Dipping miscellaneous things into strong acid is a simple yet fascinating idea for experiments. So many possibilities!
@MartinBogomolni Жыл бұрын
Cody Don - this is some of the most absolutely TERRIFYING chemistry I’ve seen you do so far… This is Styropyro territory, but with Fluorine
@danicajohnson2664 Жыл бұрын
Cody really likes playing with the most dangerous chemicals possible LOL
@patrickmihajlovic4112
Жыл бұрын
So WE dont't have to do it...! 😉😂
@cult-of-sporque
Жыл бұрын
Today we're looking at sarin and ricin, and their etching effects on different containers. ... Shows ingredients ... That fan you hear is taking care of any potential fumes, and we are downwind from any major metropolitan area, so we we're safe.
@GaiusCaligula234
Жыл бұрын
@@cult-of-sporque Neither have etching properties, and neither sarin not ricin are particularly volatile
@cult-of-sporque
Жыл бұрын
@@GaiusCaligula234 OK. Instead we're going to use some liquid nitrogen to condense both of them to liquid form, and then mix together within a pressurized vessel? Our goal today is to find a just-the-right mixture, that allows us to induce a slush-like substance that you can use tp disinfect your chicken coop.
@GaiusCaligula234
Жыл бұрын
@@cult-of-sporque Son, sarin is liquid in room temperature
@jacktobias9059 Жыл бұрын
As an archaeology student, this is both horrific and fascinating
@MCGR
Жыл бұрын
they are modern recreations of arrow heads
@jacktobias9059
Жыл бұрын
I know don't worry! Obviously Cody's a lil smarter than that xD
@refluxcatalyst7190
Жыл бұрын
As a chemist, it's just horrifying. This dude's lack of....just about every precaution is alarming.
@AnyMotoUSA
Жыл бұрын
Makes me think of the myths of when the Inca could melt and shape stone with a solution they poured over the boulders
@Ch3mG33k
Жыл бұрын
@@refluxcatalyst7190 What precautions was he missing? Proper "glass"ware, had a nice bed of lime, wore gloves, has a fan? Honestly y'all armchair chemists have probably never even set foot in a real lab lol.
@chambon818 Жыл бұрын
A before and after weighing would have been interesting to see how much mass the acid removed.
@lxlotl Жыл бұрын
I was just about to eat lunch, after being sat in front of an instrument at work for 6 hrs straight, looking for something to watch while I eat. Seeing a new Cody's Lab video made me feel a lot better 😊
@Nollie_Fullcab Жыл бұрын
I love seeing videos like this from you Cody. I can feel your genuine curiosity about this experiment and it feels like you did this work to figure something out for yourself as opposed to for your audience. If you ever find yourself thinking "im the only one that would ever watch this", when conceptualizing a video, please dont shelve it. Thats exactly ankles the kind of stuff we love from codyslab. Thank you for being you.
@teeanahera8949
7 ай бұрын
What does “That’s exactly ankles the kind of…” mean?
@nickywilkinson1212 Жыл бұрын
I have a feeling we are watching the training videos of a super villain. Step 1: extract all the precious metals Step 2: disolve the 'hero' in acid Step 3: escape to Mars and live peacefully
@Blutwind
Жыл бұрын
Nah Cody is one of the good guy chemnist. There are others way more scary (though also good guys... hopefully... *looks at NileRed and Explosions&Fire)
@Grandwigg Жыл бұрын
Loved this video. The sharpening was not what I expected. Very fascinating.
@KainYusanagi
Жыл бұрын
Same here! It must be due to the specific way that obsidian forms and its specific composition, where it shears to the monomolecular level and tends to knap in thin sheets, because I expected the thinnest part to dissolve faster than the flat of it, but it didn't!
@newq Жыл бұрын
The balls on this guy. Hydrofluoric acid scares my pants off! My chemistry lab TA in college would scold us if we even do much as wrote fluorine ions in our notes. She'd say "You should NEVER be making this ion!" and then told us some horror stories about HF. Then there's the geology grad students. I remember walking past the geology lab once and I saw a grad student in there nonchalantly eating her lunch on a table below a shelf with a bottle labeled "hydrofluoric acid, contact poison" and a skull and crossbones. Only geologists have the balls for such shenanigans. Hey... isn't Cody a geologist? See? I told you. They fear nothing!
@wcomalley Жыл бұрын
As a flint knapper this is interesting to me. One of the most arduous parts of replicating certain blade types like danish daggers is that they have to be ground to a perfect convexity. Perhaps this could greatly expedite the process!
@unvergebeneid
Жыл бұрын
But if you're doing it with modern methods, mightn't you directly use modern materials?
@wcomalley
Жыл бұрын
@@unvergebeneid Who knows how long people having been using acid to shape stone? Maybe this could explain some of the incredible stone work of the ancient egyptians like those hollow vases? Still no good theories on how those were made.
@frysebox1
Жыл бұрын
Choose another acid than this if you can, corrosive+contact poison+deadly vapours+rapidly skin penetrative isn't a great combination.
@wcomalley
Жыл бұрын
@@frysebox1 Yeah I'm a bit scared of hydroflauric acid ever since watching breaking bad haha. I wonder how effective milder acids would be. Would lye do anything to a rock? It's easy to make with campfire ash. Dannish daggers were ground on a granite slab with water... i wonder if using lye water instead would speed things up at all. Regular water takes like 20-30hrs of grinding.
@jacogomez1093
Жыл бұрын
@@wcomalley HF (with a pKa of +3.2, the less the more acidic) is by no means a very strong acid, it just has the strange characteristic of dissolving silica-based materials like glass. sulfuric (pKa of -2), hydrochloric (pKa of -7), or nitric (pKa of 'i don't remember') are stronger acids than HF, that is because fluorine is so reactive that it bonds hydrogen a little to strongly. Also, HF is very, very toxic, it reacts with calcium ions and causes cardiogenic shock and cardiac arrest if it comes into contact with the skin, It's so bad that pretty much every professional chemist I know avoids as much as humanly possible..
@psychogamer1368 Жыл бұрын
You and NileRed were the people who made me have interest in Chemistry in high school... Thanks for the videos...
@scrotiemcboogerballs1981 Жыл бұрын
My heart sank a little until you said they wasn’t true Indian arrowheads lol but your friend did a great job making those I found a few real ones here in Indiana close to my house I found one little white one I think it’s a bird point used by Indians for hunting birds very cool I used to love going arrowhead hunting thanks for sharing Cody love watching the videos
@Grandwigg
Жыл бұрын
The guys over at good and basic have some great content. Primate forging, the spinning wheels and whatnot, too. (The philosophical discussions are interesting as well). Glad to see the interactions between channels like this.
@fairweathertrains3029
Жыл бұрын
@@Grandwigg wow I never knew one could forge primates! Crazy! (I am just having a little joke) That’s all really cool though sounds like their channel is right up my alley thanks mate
@uapnz0698
Жыл бұрын
That's so cool. I'd love to find one
@unvergebeneid
Жыл бұрын
My heart sank even more because being the eurocentric prick that I am, I thought these might be neolithic! I somehow didn't put together that in the US, authentic stone arrow heads must be much more common and only a couple centuries old.
@0neIntangible
Жыл бұрын
Imagine if they had access to and could have worked with HF acid for sharpening their hunting arrow tips... lol... I found a few when I was a kid visiting my grandfathers farm in Burlington, Ontario... that was neat for a kid to find.
@RobbieBeswick Жыл бұрын
this acid can dissolve so many things but when it comes to plastic it's like 'uh i don't know what to do' i find that so funny
@OmniversalInsect
Жыл бұрын
I thought that part of breaking bad was fake but apparently not
@VincentGroenewold
Жыл бұрын
@@OmniversalInsect Nope, many weird solutions are stored in plastic. I was always kinda amazed by that working with them.
@barszczykczerwony176
Жыл бұрын
Hcl is the big boomer of acids Ain't gonna react with those new 'plastics'
@w0ttheh3ll
Жыл бұрын
@@OmniversalInsect the fake part is that they have huge jars of this extremely dangerous stuff just sitting in a high school lab's storage room.
@among-us-99999
Жыл бұрын
acetone, ether and chloroform can dissolve/attack many plastics, but do nothing to most inorganic materials
@jamesmnguyen Жыл бұрын
I would love to see a microscopic view of the edges before and after. Maybe even an atomic view if possible.
@isaiahpetersen Жыл бұрын
So glad you are still uploading. Been a long time fan. Can't wait for more!
@x9x9x9x9x9 Жыл бұрын
I find these stone videos way more interesting than I thought I would. I have always wondered about rose rock. Its a weird stone.
@TheRogueRockhound
Жыл бұрын
Rocks can be addictive ^^
@G53X0Y0Z0 Жыл бұрын
Very cool experiment and demonstration. I think the "snowflakes" in the obsidian may be volcanic ash that fell in the molten obsidian flow. Even though the materials of obsidian, agate, and flint/chert are especially suitable for knapping stone tools because of their characteristic conchoidal fracture, they are formed differently. Many people probably do not know this regarding stone tools, but for a razor sharp cutting blade our ancestors used blades similar to the un-knapped piece that sliced the paper best. Even though knapping could thin and nicely shape arrow heads and other tools, it's more difficult to get a continuous sharp edge that way.
@DannyDeVitois79 Жыл бұрын
Dang, you should have written the date on that arrowhead… Although it’ll probably be just an arbitrary number when someone discovers it in an asteroid 12 billion years from now, long after the earth has been annihilated
@aRandomFish1 Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate the uploads Cody! I don't care what you upload, it's always interesting and I'll always enjoy!
@photoeagle5100 Жыл бұрын
When the video started i immediately thought about the typical "glassware" cody uses and got a little concerned that inflation was hitting pyrex so hard that he couldn't get any then remembered that hydrofluoric dissolves glass lol
@jonasdaverio9369 Жыл бұрын
Something similar to what happened to the obsedian: we can do directional etching with KOH on silicon. Some planes of the crystal are more prone to dissolve than other, and some specific structures can be achieved through this.
@youtube.commentator Жыл бұрын
Love your uploads Cody, keep at it, we all appreciate them very much
@mikeriddle14623 ай бұрын
Your videos sometimes answer questions, I never thought I wanted to know.. cheers bro🍻
@personious_k Жыл бұрын
It's allways great when Cody brings us knowledge!
@jester-gq9jq Жыл бұрын
Awesome video thanks! Cody you are amazing I love your videos, I love your sense of humor. And I extremely respect your morals.
@mrobviuos74 Жыл бұрын
So you have found out how to acid sharpen certain stones! I love it!🤝👍👍
@honthirty_ Жыл бұрын
Really good observational science that does what we would want to. Rock on Cody!
@-41337 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely love a counterintuitive result, the most valuable kind! I really thought they would get duller as the edges with greater surface area would be dissolved more. But that's not what happened...
@Mallchad
Жыл бұрын
I think that is what happens, as you erode greater surface area it coverges on edges as the surface availible to dissolve gets smaller, which would make it dissolve more *away* from the edge. Essentially chemically sharpening the edge.
@FossilF Жыл бұрын
Cody, i have a weird thing i want to see done. Silicon metal when amorphous apprently breaks like glass, thus it should be able to be “knapped” into an arrowhead. I have experience knapping but havent been able to get a large enough piece of silicon to test it. Do you think it can be done?
@marclabelle4253
Жыл бұрын
based on my experience with amorphous Si, I would expect that you should be able to.
@lajoswinkler
Жыл бұрын
Silicon is not a metal. Even if it was, it's unnecessary to mention it's a metal.
@ChemEDan
Жыл бұрын
@@lajoswinkler You may not be a metal but you sure are dense
@KainYusanagi
Жыл бұрын
@@lajoswinkler Due to the wide variety of forms in which silicon comes in, due to various alloys and other compounds, noting it as "silicon metal" is, indeed, useful. Furthermore, while it is not in fact a metal by scientific classification, it IS a metalloid, and is used in many aspects of metalworking industries as a metal, where it is referred to as "silicon metal" for that specificity, eg. in Silumin, the silicon/aluminum alloy group; in Ferrosilicon, the iron-silicon alloy group; Nicrosil and Nisil, nickle-silicon alloys (name differentiation is for positive/negative thermocouple legs, respectively); and more. Fun fact: While it has many properties similar to metals, the reason the name of the element in modern day (going back a hundred years to its official naming) is "silicon" rather than the original "silicium", is because it is elementally closer to carbon and boron than to calcium and magnesium.
@Mp57navy
Жыл бұрын
@@lajoswinkler Every element on the periodic table after hydrogen is a metal.
@TheRogueRockhound Жыл бұрын
EDIT: This is awesome because I find a lot of big seam agates that are super hard to clean. Pressure washer wont cut it and Oxalic is too weak to take the rind off. I bet this would work great when diluted for the job. Brilliant sir, great idea! Thanks Cody!
@theCodyReeder
Жыл бұрын
You can buy a 3% HF solution at Walmart. It’s sold as a rust stain remover.
@TheRogueRockhound
Жыл бұрын
@@theCodyReeder You're the man!
@seangunn5791
Жыл бұрын
@@theCodyReeder hey. Man. Make. A. Video. On. (Interstellar. Space. ) And. The. Fermi. Paradox. Rite. Now. Do. That. Video. Now.
@Osirus1972 Жыл бұрын
I am sitting here in an assay lab at a palladium mine watching this video. . I had to resist going to the HF storage and drumming up my own experiments. Very cool stuff you have going here. Cheers!
@phizc Жыл бұрын
Congratulations, this was my 5000th liked video! 👍 I wonder if arrowheads knapped from artificial glass would also sharpen in the acid. It was surprising to me. I would have guessed the acid would round the sharp edges, not make them sharper. I guess the acid attacked everywhere the same, and as the arrowhead got thinner it exposed a fresh edge. Cool result.
@lucasvlox Жыл бұрын
I love how u pour the water in acid and you are probably doing this on purpose :D The video about this topic was the reason for me to follow ur content 6, 7, 8, 9 (???) years ago. Still one of the best, much love.
@zachaliles Жыл бұрын
I was a kid at the tail end of the acid and stone washed jeans era. You just acid washed stones, everything comes full circle eventually.
@SuperAdnan117 Жыл бұрын
Something of note, while the hand-sharpened arrowheads weren't as sharp as the acid-dipped ones, if used for hunting game, they would "stick" better to flesh and fur than the latter if they penetrated causing continuous bleeding, simply because of the jagged and irregular nature of the edge. The acid dipped arrowheads would need more prominent backward facing barbs to achieve the same level of adherance.
@TheAlexisaac1000ify Жыл бұрын
Such a transformation is neat Cody. I like the way the look how they would nature
@jackd42o Жыл бұрын
When you said the arrowheads aren't antiques it made me wonder how rare they are 'in the wild' in modern times. Always appreciate your videos and hope you're well. Thanks Cody.
@Camroc37
Жыл бұрын
Some places will have more than others, but they're hardly as common as rocks. There are a lot of time periods as well and some are much more rare. Some designs are also harder to find because they're more fragile than others. Edit: in this video he used ones knapped by machine in modern times.
@dizzy_derps
Жыл бұрын
My grandmother lived on a farm in Mississippi growing up in the 30's and 40's. Over the decades she collected hundreds of arrowheads. They had a beautiful display made for them. It was a wooden coffee table with a glass top. Under the glass was a felt lined drawer and they had them all very neatly displayed. Thinking back on it I don't know whatever happened to those arrowheads. Both my grandparents are dead now but I suspect they just left them behind when their house was destroyed by Katrina.
@jonored
Жыл бұрын
@@Camroc37 Looks like not knapped by a machine, but knapped manually by a friend who presumedly didn't mind the experiment.
@scottthomas6202 Жыл бұрын
Two jobs ago, hydrofluoric acid was used to write on and etch glass for a college theatrical department. This was sort of a " Safety is Job 42" process. In junior high school art class ( 1976), we chipped out arrowheads from beer bottle glass....that probably wouldn't be allowed now...
@patrickmihajlovic4112 Жыл бұрын
An EXTRAORDINARY vid which was entertaining AND informing me ! NOTHING more i could ask for.... THX++ Cody !
@mrln247 Жыл бұрын
I like the prank on the archaeologists. Was aware of an old trick for re-sharpening a dull file in sulfuric although never tried it myself.
@clairekholin6935 Жыл бұрын
Just putting the edge in the acid would be a cool way to sharpen it, some experiments would be cool
@CaptainKirk01 Жыл бұрын
CODY! My favorite most humble smart guy!!!
@accountid9681 Жыл бұрын
the foggy effect created on the obsidian is beautiful
@PotatoesAssistant Жыл бұрын
try melting some obsidian and flint and glass and agate together and maybe you’ll get a cool layered silica material
@user-yb5cn3np5q Жыл бұрын
How do we know HF is scary? Cody actually wears protection.
@Rebar77_real Жыл бұрын
That's what gave the edge to the Yellowstone area acid pit pre-war surgeons... probably.
@AntBangBang Жыл бұрын
Great video Cody. Really interesting.
@TheMilkMan8008 Жыл бұрын
Hey Cody. I was wondering if there was any news on the Mars One program. I haven't watched your channel in a while. I'm glad a video finally got recomended to me again and Its good to see you still making content.
@ryansmiley5495 Жыл бұрын
Looks like the most hard-core tea ever.
@matthewellisor5835 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting seeing the difference between those samples; From very far away. HF scares me as much as concentrated HOOH or TATP in larger measures than for which milligrams are convenient
@jonathanmcalroy8640 Жыл бұрын
After watching those arrowheads being made, I really needed a knap.
@fishstix4209 Жыл бұрын
That ending is gonna confuse TF out of some future archeologists when they dig it up if it ever comes to it.
@caseyneville4587 Жыл бұрын
I LOVE when a notification comes on from Cody! You make such great videos! 😊😊😊
@polytrichum1119 Жыл бұрын
Hello!I havent watched this video yet,but your videos inspired me to get into chemistry!I really thank you for that!
@flintguy Жыл бұрын
Being a flintknapper, I will say that this is one way atleast to get rid of that pesky hinge or step fracture, along with all the flaking as well lol.
@almostsapien Жыл бұрын
Imagine if someone finds that arrowhead in a couple hundred years.
@ThePerks2010 Жыл бұрын
I wonder if Cody ever had to have "the talk" with his parents? Mum - "Son, are you a domestic terrorist or just a mad scientist? We'll accept you either way but you might need help"
@chrish9516 Жыл бұрын
You have fantastic chopstick skills.
@jansenart0 Жыл бұрын
15:15 Show this section to your geologist friends to distract them while you wind up and aim with your wooden cudgel.
@RuneChaosMarine10 ай бұрын
@4:52 like 'who framed rodger rabbit' and the 'dip' to melt cartoons. and the big rubber gloves.
@Dan-vq4pz Жыл бұрын
I love the strength/weakness aspects of almost all elements... Yeah it'll melt and absolutely destroy this, but it can't touch this. Except ClF3
@jesseasher7520 Жыл бұрын
awesome video, i thought before the results it would actually dull the edges as they are the thinnest part, instead it sharpened them!
@nobody8717 Жыл бұрын
How does the permeation in acid effect the ability to further work the piece? Or maybe work the piece, then paint a certain amount of acid on the edges for a crisper clean.
@stamasd8500 Жыл бұрын
The scary part about HF is not that it will burn you, but that it will poison you. It gets absorbed quickly through your skin because it's such a small molecule. And once inside it will react with the calcium in your bloodstream, causing 2 things to happen: 1. it will lower your calcium to dangerous levels, impairing many functions such as muscle contraction - including the heart muscle, myocardium; and 2. the calcium fluoride precipitates in the bloodstream as little crystals, which will clog your kidneys and give you renal failure.
@jessicav2031 Жыл бұрын
**Casually pans to large jug of HF** Eep! I'm definitely not that brave, but then again, I don't taste-test mercury either. Such a lovely substance, "goes right through gloves" and then "you don't know it but you've already had a lethal dose". I would definitely slip and dump a liter of it on myself.
@davidsmith7653
Жыл бұрын
And if you were from a civilised country you'd dump a litre of it on yourself :)
@jessicav2031
Жыл бұрын
@@davidsmith7653 We've only been trying to metrify since 1875, we're working on it. Maybe give us a break on spelling in the meantime.
@demoniack81
Жыл бұрын
@@davidsmith7653 Liter and litre are both correct, it's just an american/uk english thing like aluminum and aluminium. Personally, even though in my own language (Italian) it's "litro" which is closer to the UK spelling, I find "liter" much better. It's easier to pronounce and clearer.
@LiborTinka
Жыл бұрын
you are safe if you know what you are doing - people handle dangerous chemicals all the time - like filling gas canisters, diluting bleach, ammonia...
@unvergebeneid
Жыл бұрын
@@demoniack81 I mean, it's not like the UK litre is pronounced like the French word. In fact, in the British pronunciation, there's no /r/ at all, neither before nor after the vowel. It's just a schwa.
@timmienorrie Жыл бұрын
This was really interesting, That is one scareeeee acid. Has to be handled with extraordinary care. I have a friend who got a splash on a fingernail and it took the hospital weeks to give him the all-clear.
@txjigen8 Жыл бұрын
Cody drowning rocks killed me lmfao
@VashGames Жыл бұрын
Imagine seeing your lab report pinned with this arrowhead and a note "You have failed this class"
@jamiehughes5573 Жыл бұрын
I find in sort of ironic that one of the strongest acids cannot dissolve plastics. Shows you how hard to break down plastic is
@nickg5250 Жыл бұрын
This video is pure anxiety! That acid is scary stuff...
@GabrielsLogic7 ай бұрын
Lol! I love you adding water to the acid. I remember an old video you made on the subject. There's no way that wasn't on purpose 😅😅
@toreedr Жыл бұрын
4:50 I think this guy just snapped into the evil mad scientist everyone was expecting him to become.
@Cinual Жыл бұрын
Holy crap those are sharp!
@robynevans157 Жыл бұрын
4:50-4:55 is when he finally loses his sanity.
@personious_k5 ай бұрын
Love all your videos man! Wonder eho will find your arrowhead in the future?
@HadronWolf Жыл бұрын
I went the extra step and watched this on acid, groovy.
@chucklearnslithics3751 Жыл бұрын
Noooo! You sicken me... 😁 That Black Rock desert/Delta "obsidian" is indeed extremely tough rock and doesn't act much like an obsidian at all, to knap. I think it's only obsidian in name and perhaps in form, but probably pretty silica poor.
@theCodyReeder
Жыл бұрын
I like how you correctly identified its source.
@chucklearnslithics3751
Жыл бұрын
@@theCodyReederOh, I've chased all kinds of knapable rocks around the state and beyond. I've sent samples to the Western Digs labs for XRF identification and their lithic sourcing database. If it knaps and it's in Utah, I've probably seen it and tried it. 😉
@nazamroth8427 Жыл бұрын
I first read hydrochloric acid, and went "eh, limestone arrowheads, I suppose."
@jameswhatsit Жыл бұрын
If Cody’s wearing gloves you know it’s proper hazardous!!
@erikhartwig6366 Жыл бұрын
@4:48 LOL... that reminded me of the Mr Bill skits
@danielfryar677 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for being nice when I ran into you at the store lol. I appreciate what you do
@sweetiewolfgirl Жыл бұрын
I have only watched the intro, and I have seen a really interesting detail already i have to bring up. In the fume hood, the power on the surface around all the beakers, is that baking soda? In case of spills to neutralize the acid? Edit: So is lime. Right idea as to why. Is lime needed specificly because of the strength of the acid or possible reactions?
@lung0fish1 Жыл бұрын
I'm relieved that these were not artifacts. HF is scary shiz, tho.
@schattenprinz Жыл бұрын
No way. I was curious about the exact same thing for a few days now and unrelated to that thought I wanted to check out this channel again. And what do I see? nice work
@alejandrostrass2559 Жыл бұрын
Am I the only one who always reads "cody slab"? 😂
@Smallathe Жыл бұрын
A very cool experiment!!!
@infestus5657 Жыл бұрын
You finally got your Vapor hood, congrats.
@INT41O Жыл бұрын
Glass, metal, ceramics, flesh: Cillit Bang! Cleans up the lot.
@satoau1 Жыл бұрын
well that was even more interesting than i expected. great science!
@Broockle Жыл бұрын
I would have thought they'd get more blunt because the acute angles have more surface area than a dull edge. Kinda like a ball of dragoons completely surrounded by zerglings.
Пікірлер: 574
I love arrowheads, especially obsidian ones...in 7th grade we went to a Native American historical preservation, there was an older man sitting at a table making an arrowhead out of obsidian with a couple pieces of leather and antler. Me and a bunch of kids started watching him, and they all eventually went to look at other things, but I stood there and watched him the entire time...I dont remember either of us saying a word to each other other than hello. He was finishing it as our field trip was ending, he glanced around, wrapped it in a piece of paper and handed it to me and just said 'shhh'. I gently stuffed it in my pocket and proceeded to hold the biggest secret of my life the entire bus ride back to school, the last hour of school, and the bus ride home before I could have a little freak out about him giving it to me. I pulled it out of my pocket, unwrapped it and marveled at it, it was huge, and sharp, and you could see right through it, totally blew my mind. That was nearly 30 years ago, I still have it, wrapped up safely in a box that I open occasionally when nostalgia gets the better of me. ...now if you'll excuse me, theres a box I need to look at...
@brokenacoustic
Жыл бұрын
I found it, then recorded it, then wrote a song for it, then recorded it, then mixed them, then uploaded it, now I'm posting it...thanks Cody! lol
@Gabriel-nf8eb
Жыл бұрын
That's really cool!
@christianterrill3503
Жыл бұрын
There is a guy on KZread that does that for videos. All different styles of flint napping
@brokenacoustic
Жыл бұрын
@@Gabriel-nf8eb Thanks, it was definitely one of the better moments of schooling lol
@brokenacoustic
Жыл бұрын
@@christianterrill3503 Yeah I've watched a few, I've got obsidian and flint, but have yet to give it a try. One of these days...
"No! Don't lower me in the acid!...blerglglg"
@tau9632
Жыл бұрын
Hahahah yeah I loved that
@FishPit
Жыл бұрын
I almost choked on my food. Ahahah
@CaveChronicles
Жыл бұрын
Hello, how are you? I am under the water. Ululululu
@mikeh4271
Жыл бұрын
I came here to make that same quote. Lol!
@barszczykczerwony176
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that's going to be memed to oblivion
Every chemistry teacher in the history of mankind: "Always pour acid into water" Cody: "Don't tell me how to live my life"
@mariohendriks1
Жыл бұрын
I once poured water into oleum. It was quite an exciting experience.
@indigo_carmine
Жыл бұрын
to be honest you should be ok unless you work with oleum or fuming nitric acid.
@hammerfix7241
Жыл бұрын
why?
@AkiSan0
Жыл бұрын
unless its highly concentrated and a medium to high amount of acid, nothing much happens except for mostly a slight rise in temperature. try that with a lot of oleum and its a different story...
@lajoswinkler
Жыл бұрын
Every good chemist knows it only applies for few acids like concentrated sulfuric, perchloric, oleum. It's perfectly useless rule for other acids. Nothing will happen if you pour water into concentrated nitric or acids made from hydrohalogenides.
We used to use HF to dissolve quartz that held lode gold nuggets to improve the specimens. Scary stuff even for a Geochemist. We didn't dilute ours though so it worked faster and we could direct it where we wanted rather than just dunking the whole chunk. In regard to your results, you need to remember that while Chert and Agate are primarily composed of quartz (a silicate mineral), Obsidian is simply rapidly cooled lava which contains many minerals other than silicates and those would resist the acid.
@nunyabisnass1141
Жыл бұрын
Im terrified to touch the stuff, so i would probably just use hot sodium hydroxide.
@HESDONEIT
Жыл бұрын
fellas he's literally named rockbutcher, i'd trust him
@teeanahera8949
7 ай бұрын
Do you seriously think you can give Cody a lesson in geology. Hilarious.
@rockbutcher
7 ай бұрын
@@teeanahera8949 Given that I have been a Geologist for longer than Cody has been walking? Yes I do.
@seeharvester
2 ай бұрын
Did you ever dissolve any claim-jumpers?
Cody is exactly the kind of person I would expect to have a (maybe) 14-year-old bottle of HF just lying around like it's no big deal.
they do something similar for fishing hooks. Sometimes you will find written on the packaging "chemically sharpened"
@SpaghettiEnterprises
Жыл бұрын
Same deal with a lot of college students
Other comments talking about how dangerous 50% HF is. Me over here just glad he wore gloves when pouring it this time
Hydrofluoric acid is high on my list of things that I don't want to play with.
@ex5080
Жыл бұрын
Probably a smart idea
@huathai8204
Жыл бұрын
Next on Cody's list chlorine trifluoride aka "human kryptonite"...
@VincentGroenewold
Жыл бұрын
I did in my scientific career, boy did I take precautions. I also played with a solution that had the warning not to breath any vapor in or spill whatever, it would rupture my red blood cells immediately and I would suffocate. Joy :)
@sanityormadness
Жыл бұрын
Next time: Can you swim in mercury? "Of course, the greatest problem is the density of mercury makes it incredibly difficult to immerse yourself. This is why I'm going to be wearing these uranium waders..."
@Karreth
Жыл бұрын
Cody has done the floating in mercury video already, actually. He wore boots, though.
Dipping miscellaneous things into strong acid is a simple yet fascinating idea for experiments. So many possibilities!
Cody Don - this is some of the most absolutely TERRIFYING chemistry I’ve seen you do so far… This is Styropyro territory, but with Fluorine
Cody really likes playing with the most dangerous chemicals possible LOL
@patrickmihajlovic4112
Жыл бұрын
So WE dont't have to do it...! 😉😂
@cult-of-sporque
Жыл бұрын
Today we're looking at sarin and ricin, and their etching effects on different containers. ... Shows ingredients ... That fan you hear is taking care of any potential fumes, and we are downwind from any major metropolitan area, so we we're safe.
@GaiusCaligula234
Жыл бұрын
@@cult-of-sporque Neither have etching properties, and neither sarin not ricin are particularly volatile
@cult-of-sporque
Жыл бұрын
@@GaiusCaligula234 OK. Instead we're going to use some liquid nitrogen to condense both of them to liquid form, and then mix together within a pressurized vessel? Our goal today is to find a just-the-right mixture, that allows us to induce a slush-like substance that you can use tp disinfect your chicken coop.
@GaiusCaligula234
Жыл бұрын
@@cult-of-sporque Son, sarin is liquid in room temperature
As an archaeology student, this is both horrific and fascinating
@MCGR
Жыл бұрын
they are modern recreations of arrow heads
@jacktobias9059
Жыл бұрын
I know don't worry! Obviously Cody's a lil smarter than that xD
@refluxcatalyst7190
Жыл бұрын
As a chemist, it's just horrifying. This dude's lack of....just about every precaution is alarming.
@AnyMotoUSA
Жыл бұрын
Makes me think of the myths of when the Inca could melt and shape stone with a solution they poured over the boulders
@Ch3mG33k
Жыл бұрын
@@refluxcatalyst7190 What precautions was he missing? Proper "glass"ware, had a nice bed of lime, wore gloves, has a fan? Honestly y'all armchair chemists have probably never even set foot in a real lab lol.
A before and after weighing would have been interesting to see how much mass the acid removed.
I was just about to eat lunch, after being sat in front of an instrument at work for 6 hrs straight, looking for something to watch while I eat. Seeing a new Cody's Lab video made me feel a lot better 😊
I love seeing videos like this from you Cody. I can feel your genuine curiosity about this experiment and it feels like you did this work to figure something out for yourself as opposed to for your audience. If you ever find yourself thinking "im the only one that would ever watch this", when conceptualizing a video, please dont shelve it. Thats exactly ankles the kind of stuff we love from codyslab. Thank you for being you.
@teeanahera8949
7 ай бұрын
What does “That’s exactly ankles the kind of…” mean?
I have a feeling we are watching the training videos of a super villain. Step 1: extract all the precious metals Step 2: disolve the 'hero' in acid Step 3: escape to Mars and live peacefully
@Blutwind
Жыл бұрын
Nah Cody is one of the good guy chemnist. There are others way more scary (though also good guys... hopefully... *looks at NileRed and Explosions&Fire)
Loved this video. The sharpening was not what I expected. Very fascinating.
@KainYusanagi
Жыл бұрын
Same here! It must be due to the specific way that obsidian forms and its specific composition, where it shears to the monomolecular level and tends to knap in thin sheets, because I expected the thinnest part to dissolve faster than the flat of it, but it didn't!
The balls on this guy. Hydrofluoric acid scares my pants off! My chemistry lab TA in college would scold us if we even do much as wrote fluorine ions in our notes. She'd say "You should NEVER be making this ion!" and then told us some horror stories about HF. Then there's the geology grad students. I remember walking past the geology lab once and I saw a grad student in there nonchalantly eating her lunch on a table below a shelf with a bottle labeled "hydrofluoric acid, contact poison" and a skull and crossbones. Only geologists have the balls for such shenanigans. Hey... isn't Cody a geologist? See? I told you. They fear nothing!
As a flint knapper this is interesting to me. One of the most arduous parts of replicating certain blade types like danish daggers is that they have to be ground to a perfect convexity. Perhaps this could greatly expedite the process!
@unvergebeneid
Жыл бұрын
But if you're doing it with modern methods, mightn't you directly use modern materials?
@wcomalley
Жыл бұрын
@@unvergebeneid Who knows how long people having been using acid to shape stone? Maybe this could explain some of the incredible stone work of the ancient egyptians like those hollow vases? Still no good theories on how those were made.
@frysebox1
Жыл бұрын
Choose another acid than this if you can, corrosive+contact poison+deadly vapours+rapidly skin penetrative isn't a great combination.
@wcomalley
Жыл бұрын
@@frysebox1 Yeah I'm a bit scared of hydroflauric acid ever since watching breaking bad haha. I wonder how effective milder acids would be. Would lye do anything to a rock? It's easy to make with campfire ash. Dannish daggers were ground on a granite slab with water... i wonder if using lye water instead would speed things up at all. Regular water takes like 20-30hrs of grinding.
@jacogomez1093
Жыл бұрын
@@wcomalley HF (with a pKa of +3.2, the less the more acidic) is by no means a very strong acid, it just has the strange characteristic of dissolving silica-based materials like glass. sulfuric (pKa of -2), hydrochloric (pKa of -7), or nitric (pKa of 'i don't remember') are stronger acids than HF, that is because fluorine is so reactive that it bonds hydrogen a little to strongly. Also, HF is very, very toxic, it reacts with calcium ions and causes cardiogenic shock and cardiac arrest if it comes into contact with the skin, It's so bad that pretty much every professional chemist I know avoids as much as humanly possible..
You and NileRed were the people who made me have interest in Chemistry in high school... Thanks for the videos...
My heart sank a little until you said they wasn’t true Indian arrowheads lol but your friend did a great job making those I found a few real ones here in Indiana close to my house I found one little white one I think it’s a bird point used by Indians for hunting birds very cool I used to love going arrowhead hunting thanks for sharing Cody love watching the videos
@Grandwigg
Жыл бұрын
The guys over at good and basic have some great content. Primate forging, the spinning wheels and whatnot, too. (The philosophical discussions are interesting as well). Glad to see the interactions between channels like this.
@fairweathertrains3029
Жыл бұрын
@@Grandwigg wow I never knew one could forge primates! Crazy! (I am just having a little joke) That’s all really cool though sounds like their channel is right up my alley thanks mate
@uapnz0698
Жыл бұрын
That's so cool. I'd love to find one
@unvergebeneid
Жыл бұрын
My heart sank even more because being the eurocentric prick that I am, I thought these might be neolithic! I somehow didn't put together that in the US, authentic stone arrow heads must be much more common and only a couple centuries old.
@0neIntangible
Жыл бұрын
Imagine if they had access to and could have worked with HF acid for sharpening their hunting arrow tips... lol... I found a few when I was a kid visiting my grandfathers farm in Burlington, Ontario... that was neat for a kid to find.
this acid can dissolve so many things but when it comes to plastic it's like 'uh i don't know what to do' i find that so funny
@OmniversalInsect
Жыл бұрын
I thought that part of breaking bad was fake but apparently not
@VincentGroenewold
Жыл бұрын
@@OmniversalInsect Nope, many weird solutions are stored in plastic. I was always kinda amazed by that working with them.
@barszczykczerwony176
Жыл бұрын
Hcl is the big boomer of acids Ain't gonna react with those new 'plastics'
@w0ttheh3ll
Жыл бұрын
@@OmniversalInsect the fake part is that they have huge jars of this extremely dangerous stuff just sitting in a high school lab's storage room.
@among-us-99999
Жыл бұрын
acetone, ether and chloroform can dissolve/attack many plastics, but do nothing to most inorganic materials
I would love to see a microscopic view of the edges before and after. Maybe even an atomic view if possible.
So glad you are still uploading. Been a long time fan. Can't wait for more!
I find these stone videos way more interesting than I thought I would. I have always wondered about rose rock. Its a weird stone.
@TheRogueRockhound
Жыл бұрын
Rocks can be addictive ^^
Very cool experiment and demonstration. I think the "snowflakes" in the obsidian may be volcanic ash that fell in the molten obsidian flow. Even though the materials of obsidian, agate, and flint/chert are especially suitable for knapping stone tools because of their characteristic conchoidal fracture, they are formed differently. Many people probably do not know this regarding stone tools, but for a razor sharp cutting blade our ancestors used blades similar to the un-knapped piece that sliced the paper best. Even though knapping could thin and nicely shape arrow heads and other tools, it's more difficult to get a continuous sharp edge that way.
Dang, you should have written the date on that arrowhead… Although it’ll probably be just an arbitrary number when someone discovers it in an asteroid 12 billion years from now, long after the earth has been annihilated
I really appreciate the uploads Cody! I don't care what you upload, it's always interesting and I'll always enjoy!
When the video started i immediately thought about the typical "glassware" cody uses and got a little concerned that inflation was hitting pyrex so hard that he couldn't get any then remembered that hydrofluoric dissolves glass lol
Something similar to what happened to the obsedian: we can do directional etching with KOH on silicon. Some planes of the crystal are more prone to dissolve than other, and some specific structures can be achieved through this.
Love your uploads Cody, keep at it, we all appreciate them very much
Your videos sometimes answer questions, I never thought I wanted to know.. cheers bro🍻
It's allways great when Cody brings us knowledge!
Awesome video thanks! Cody you are amazing I love your videos, I love your sense of humor. And I extremely respect your morals.
So you have found out how to acid sharpen certain stones! I love it!🤝👍👍
Really good observational science that does what we would want to. Rock on Cody!
Absolutely love a counterintuitive result, the most valuable kind! I really thought they would get duller as the edges with greater surface area would be dissolved more. But that's not what happened...
@Mallchad
Жыл бұрын
I think that is what happens, as you erode greater surface area it coverges on edges as the surface availible to dissolve gets smaller, which would make it dissolve more *away* from the edge. Essentially chemically sharpening the edge.
Cody, i have a weird thing i want to see done. Silicon metal when amorphous apprently breaks like glass, thus it should be able to be “knapped” into an arrowhead. I have experience knapping but havent been able to get a large enough piece of silicon to test it. Do you think it can be done?
@marclabelle4253
Жыл бұрын
based on my experience with amorphous Si, I would expect that you should be able to.
@lajoswinkler
Жыл бұрын
Silicon is not a metal. Even if it was, it's unnecessary to mention it's a metal.
@ChemEDan
Жыл бұрын
@@lajoswinkler You may not be a metal but you sure are dense
@KainYusanagi
Жыл бұрын
@@lajoswinkler Due to the wide variety of forms in which silicon comes in, due to various alloys and other compounds, noting it as "silicon metal" is, indeed, useful. Furthermore, while it is not in fact a metal by scientific classification, it IS a metalloid, and is used in many aspects of metalworking industries as a metal, where it is referred to as "silicon metal" for that specificity, eg. in Silumin, the silicon/aluminum alloy group; in Ferrosilicon, the iron-silicon alloy group; Nicrosil and Nisil, nickle-silicon alloys (name differentiation is for positive/negative thermocouple legs, respectively); and more. Fun fact: While it has many properties similar to metals, the reason the name of the element in modern day (going back a hundred years to its official naming) is "silicon" rather than the original "silicium", is because it is elementally closer to carbon and boron than to calcium and magnesium.
@Mp57navy
Жыл бұрын
@@lajoswinkler Every element on the periodic table after hydrogen is a metal.
EDIT: This is awesome because I find a lot of big seam agates that are super hard to clean. Pressure washer wont cut it and Oxalic is too weak to take the rind off. I bet this would work great when diluted for the job. Brilliant sir, great idea! Thanks Cody!
@theCodyReeder
Жыл бұрын
You can buy a 3% HF solution at Walmart. It’s sold as a rust stain remover.
@TheRogueRockhound
Жыл бұрын
@@theCodyReeder You're the man!
@seangunn5791
Жыл бұрын
@@theCodyReeder hey. Man. Make. A. Video. On. (Interstellar. Space. ) And. The. Fermi. Paradox. Rite. Now. Do. That. Video. Now.
I am sitting here in an assay lab at a palladium mine watching this video. . I had to resist going to the HF storage and drumming up my own experiments. Very cool stuff you have going here. Cheers!
Congratulations, this was my 5000th liked video! 👍 I wonder if arrowheads knapped from artificial glass would also sharpen in the acid. It was surprising to me. I would have guessed the acid would round the sharp edges, not make them sharper. I guess the acid attacked everywhere the same, and as the arrowhead got thinner it exposed a fresh edge. Cool result.
I love how u pour the water in acid and you are probably doing this on purpose :D The video about this topic was the reason for me to follow ur content 6, 7, 8, 9 (???) years ago. Still one of the best, much love.
I was a kid at the tail end of the acid and stone washed jeans era. You just acid washed stones, everything comes full circle eventually.
Something of note, while the hand-sharpened arrowheads weren't as sharp as the acid-dipped ones, if used for hunting game, they would "stick" better to flesh and fur than the latter if they penetrated causing continuous bleeding, simply because of the jagged and irregular nature of the edge. The acid dipped arrowheads would need more prominent backward facing barbs to achieve the same level of adherance.
Such a transformation is neat Cody. I like the way the look how they would nature
When you said the arrowheads aren't antiques it made me wonder how rare they are 'in the wild' in modern times. Always appreciate your videos and hope you're well. Thanks Cody.
@Camroc37
Жыл бұрын
Some places will have more than others, but they're hardly as common as rocks. There are a lot of time periods as well and some are much more rare. Some designs are also harder to find because they're more fragile than others. Edit: in this video he used ones knapped by machine in modern times.
@dizzy_derps
Жыл бұрын
My grandmother lived on a farm in Mississippi growing up in the 30's and 40's. Over the decades she collected hundreds of arrowheads. They had a beautiful display made for them. It was a wooden coffee table with a glass top. Under the glass was a felt lined drawer and they had them all very neatly displayed. Thinking back on it I don't know whatever happened to those arrowheads. Both my grandparents are dead now but I suspect they just left them behind when their house was destroyed by Katrina.
@jonored
Жыл бұрын
@@Camroc37 Looks like not knapped by a machine, but knapped manually by a friend who presumedly didn't mind the experiment.
Two jobs ago, hydrofluoric acid was used to write on and etch glass for a college theatrical department. This was sort of a " Safety is Job 42" process. In junior high school art class ( 1976), we chipped out arrowheads from beer bottle glass....that probably wouldn't be allowed now...
An EXTRAORDINARY vid which was entertaining AND informing me ! NOTHING more i could ask for.... THX++ Cody !
I like the prank on the archaeologists. Was aware of an old trick for re-sharpening a dull file in sulfuric although never tried it myself.
Just putting the edge in the acid would be a cool way to sharpen it, some experiments would be cool
CODY! My favorite most humble smart guy!!!
the foggy effect created on the obsidian is beautiful
try melting some obsidian and flint and glass and agate together and maybe you’ll get a cool layered silica material
How do we know HF is scary? Cody actually wears protection.
That's what gave the edge to the Yellowstone area acid pit pre-war surgeons... probably.
Great video Cody. Really interesting.
Hey Cody. I was wondering if there was any news on the Mars One program. I haven't watched your channel in a while. I'm glad a video finally got recomended to me again and Its good to see you still making content.
Looks like the most hard-core tea ever.
Very interesting seeing the difference between those samples; From very far away. HF scares me as much as concentrated HOOH or TATP in larger measures than for which milligrams are convenient
After watching those arrowheads being made, I really needed a knap.
That ending is gonna confuse TF out of some future archeologists when they dig it up if it ever comes to it.
I LOVE when a notification comes on from Cody! You make such great videos! 😊😊😊
Hello!I havent watched this video yet,but your videos inspired me to get into chemistry!I really thank you for that!
Being a flintknapper, I will say that this is one way atleast to get rid of that pesky hinge or step fracture, along with all the flaking as well lol.
Imagine if someone finds that arrowhead in a couple hundred years.
I wonder if Cody ever had to have "the talk" with his parents? Mum - "Son, are you a domestic terrorist or just a mad scientist? We'll accept you either way but you might need help"
You have fantastic chopstick skills.
15:15 Show this section to your geologist friends to distract them while you wind up and aim with your wooden cudgel.
@4:52 like 'who framed rodger rabbit' and the 'dip' to melt cartoons. and the big rubber gloves.
I love the strength/weakness aspects of almost all elements... Yeah it'll melt and absolutely destroy this, but it can't touch this. Except ClF3
awesome video, i thought before the results it would actually dull the edges as they are the thinnest part, instead it sharpened them!
How does the permeation in acid effect the ability to further work the piece? Or maybe work the piece, then paint a certain amount of acid on the edges for a crisper clean.
The scary part about HF is not that it will burn you, but that it will poison you. It gets absorbed quickly through your skin because it's such a small molecule. And once inside it will react with the calcium in your bloodstream, causing 2 things to happen: 1. it will lower your calcium to dangerous levels, impairing many functions such as muscle contraction - including the heart muscle, myocardium; and 2. the calcium fluoride precipitates in the bloodstream as little crystals, which will clog your kidneys and give you renal failure.
**Casually pans to large jug of HF** Eep! I'm definitely not that brave, but then again, I don't taste-test mercury either. Such a lovely substance, "goes right through gloves" and then "you don't know it but you've already had a lethal dose". I would definitely slip and dump a liter of it on myself.
@davidsmith7653
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And if you were from a civilised country you'd dump a litre of it on yourself :)
@jessicav2031
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@@davidsmith7653 We've only been trying to metrify since 1875, we're working on it. Maybe give us a break on spelling in the meantime.
@demoniack81
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@@davidsmith7653 Liter and litre are both correct, it's just an american/uk english thing like aluminum and aluminium. Personally, even though in my own language (Italian) it's "litro" which is closer to the UK spelling, I find "liter" much better. It's easier to pronounce and clearer.
@LiborTinka
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you are safe if you know what you are doing - people handle dangerous chemicals all the time - like filling gas canisters, diluting bleach, ammonia...
@unvergebeneid
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@@demoniack81 I mean, it's not like the UK litre is pronounced like the French word. In fact, in the British pronunciation, there's no /r/ at all, neither before nor after the vowel. It's just a schwa.
This was really interesting, That is one scareeeee acid. Has to be handled with extraordinary care. I have a friend who got a splash on a fingernail and it took the hospital weeks to give him the all-clear.
Cody drowning rocks killed me lmfao
Imagine seeing your lab report pinned with this arrowhead and a note "You have failed this class"
I find in sort of ironic that one of the strongest acids cannot dissolve plastics. Shows you how hard to break down plastic is
This video is pure anxiety! That acid is scary stuff...
Lol! I love you adding water to the acid. I remember an old video you made on the subject. There's no way that wasn't on purpose 😅😅
4:50 I think this guy just snapped into the evil mad scientist everyone was expecting him to become.
Holy crap those are sharp!
4:50-4:55 is when he finally loses his sanity.
Love all your videos man! Wonder eho will find your arrowhead in the future?
I went the extra step and watched this on acid, groovy.
Noooo! You sicken me... 😁 That Black Rock desert/Delta "obsidian" is indeed extremely tough rock and doesn't act much like an obsidian at all, to knap. I think it's only obsidian in name and perhaps in form, but probably pretty silica poor.
@theCodyReeder
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I like how you correctly identified its source.
@chucklearnslithics3751
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@@theCodyReederOh, I've chased all kinds of knapable rocks around the state and beyond. I've sent samples to the Western Digs labs for XRF identification and their lithic sourcing database. If it knaps and it's in Utah, I've probably seen it and tried it. 😉
I first read hydrochloric acid, and went "eh, limestone arrowheads, I suppose."
If Cody’s wearing gloves you know it’s proper hazardous!!
@4:48 LOL... that reminded me of the Mr Bill skits
Thanks for being nice when I ran into you at the store lol. I appreciate what you do
I have only watched the intro, and I have seen a really interesting detail already i have to bring up. In the fume hood, the power on the surface around all the beakers, is that baking soda? In case of spills to neutralize the acid? Edit: So is lime. Right idea as to why. Is lime needed specificly because of the strength of the acid or possible reactions?
I'm relieved that these were not artifacts. HF is scary shiz, tho.
No way. I was curious about the exact same thing for a few days now and unrelated to that thought I wanted to check out this channel again. And what do I see? nice work
Am I the only one who always reads "cody slab"? 😂
A very cool experiment!!!
You finally got your Vapor hood, congrats.
Glass, metal, ceramics, flesh: Cillit Bang! Cleans up the lot.
well that was even more interesting than i expected. great science!
I would have thought they'd get more blunt because the acute angles have more surface area than a dull edge. Kinda like a ball of dragoons completely surrounded by zerglings.
Awesome video thanks cody