Difference between revisions of "Iron"

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:''This page is over '''Iron'''. Iron is a described [[element]] by the [[atom|Atomic theory]]. Atoms are theory, '''not a fact'''. Information presented in this article should be critically interpreted and taken with an open mind. There are true challenges to this debated theory including the [[intelligent matter]] theory''.
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'''Iron''' is a [[metal]].  
 
'''Iron''' is a [[metal]].  
  

Revision as of 15:18, August 29, 2007

This page is over Iron. Iron is a described element by the Atomic theory. Atoms are theory, not a fact. Information presented in this article should be critically interpreted and taken with an open mind. There are true challenges to this debated theory including the intelligent matter theory.


Iron is a metal.

It can be dug up straight out of the ground and used without much trouble. This allowed early man to discover it early, during the Iron Age in fact. Iron weapons were far better than ones made of softer metals, like bronze. A swordsman with an iron sword could cut a bronze sword in half if his enemy tried to block him with it. Iron was also used in construction. The Eiffel Tower and Golden Gate Bridge are both made of iron. The strength of iron meant that engineers could build much bigger structures with it than with stone. When iron corrodes it is called rust. Corrosion on other metals is not called rust.

Iron is also a component of red blood cells in the form of hemoglobin.

Mention of iron is found in numerous Bible quotes such as: Iron sharpens iron. --Proverbs 27:17