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Prometheus
stole it from the gods and bequeathed it to humans. Aristotle defined it as one
of the four essential elements. Since its earliest known controlled use
1,420,000 years ago, fire has inspired stories and speculation.
Early
chemists believed that fire was caused by the liberation of a substance,
phlogiston, found in every combustible material. But observations made in the late
18th century revealed a decidedly less mysterious ingredient: oxygen.
Fire is a
chemical reaction that releases light and heat. The display usually marks the
meeting of a combustible material and oxygen, although other chemicals can spark flames
as well. These flames occur when small particles of the combustible material
are heated to the point of incandescence and shot upward.
Given a
steady supply of fuel, this exothermic reaction will continue unabated. But
fires consume combustibles greedily, hence the need to frequently feed your
fireplace to keep the flames ablaze. Even the sun--which
creates heat and light in nuclear reactions that involve the fusing of hydrogen
atoms into helium--will burn through its fuel in about four billion years. If
we're still around, expect all
manner of chaos.
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