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  2. Pyrgi Tablets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyrgi_Tablets

    The Pyrgi Tablets (dated c. 500 BC) are three golden plates inscribed with a bilingual Phoenician–Etruscan dedicatory text. They are the oldest historical source documents from Italy, predating Roman hegemony, and are rare examples of texts in these languages.

  3. Gold-containing drugs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold-containing_drugs

    The use of gold compounds has decreased since the 1980s because of numerous side effects and monitoring requirements, limited efficacy, and very slow onset of action. Most chemical compounds of gold, including some of the drugs discussed below, are not salts, but are examples of metal thiolate complexes .

  4. Petelia Gold Tablet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petelia_Gold_Tablet

    In the 1830s, an inscribed gold tablet was unearthed at the ancient Greek site of Petelia near Strongoli in Calabria.Little is known of the circumstances of the find nor of its provenance subsequent to the find, before it was acquired by the British Museum from the archaeologist and collector James Millingen in 1843.

  5. Totenpass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Totenpass

    Totenpass (plural Totenpässe) is a German term sometimes used for inscribed tablets or metal leaves found in burials primarily of those presumed to be initiates into Orphic, Dionysiac, and some ancient Egyptian and Semitic religions. The term may be understood in English as a "passport for the dead". [1]

  6. Enochian magic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enochian_magic

    The first eighteen keys are typically associated with opening gates to the realms of elements and sub-elements. In Enochian magic, these realms are often mapped onto the Great Tablet, a complex symbolic diagram used in Enochian ritual work. [29] The nineteenth key is specifically used to open gateways to the Thirty Aethyrs. [28]

  7. History of pharmacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_pharmacy

    Sumerian cuneiform tablets record prescriptions for medicine. [5] Ancient Egyptian pharmacological knowledge was recorded in various papyri, such as the Ebers Papyrus of 1550 BC and the Edwin Smith Papyrus of the 16th century BC. The very beginnings of pharmaceutical texts were written on clay tablets by Mesopotamians.

  8. Tablet (pharmacy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tablet_(pharmacy)

    Modern tablet presses reach output volumes of up to 1,700,000 tablets per hour. These huge volumes require frequent in-process quality control for the tablet weight, thickness and hardness. Due to efforts to reduce rejects rates and machine down-time, automated tablet testing devices are used on-line with the tablet press or off-line in the IPC ...

  9. Plimpton 322 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plimpton_322

    Plimpton 322 is a Babylonian clay tablet, believed to have been written around 1800 BC, that contains a mathematical table written in cuneiform script.Each row of the table relates to a Pythagorean triple, that is, a triple of integers (,,) that satisfies the Pythagorean theorem, + =, the rule that equates the sum of the squares of the legs of a right triangle to the square of the hypotenuse.