Amber (pronounced am-ber)
(1) A pale yellow, sometimes reddish or brownish, brittle,
translucent fossil resin of extinct coniferous trees that occurs in tertiary
deposits; capable of gaining a negative electrical charge by friction and a
fine insulator.
(2) The yellowish-brown color of amber resin; of the color
of amber; yellowish-brown (not applied to the variety “blue amber” which appears
blue rather than yellow under direct sunlight).
(3) To perfume or flavor with ambergris (rare and used
only in the industrial production of scents).
(4) To cause to take on the yellowish-brown colour of
amber (now rare and used only as a literary or poetic device).
(5) Certain objects made of amber (jewelry; ornamental
articles; relics; fossilized creatures contained within the resin etc).
(6) The intermediate light in a set of three traffic
lights, which when illuminated indicates that drivers should stop short of the
intersection when safe to do so (green indicating “go” and red “stop”). In some places the amber is referred to as “orange”.
(7) By extension from the use in traffic management, an indication
in other contexts that one should hesitance to proceed or proceed only with
caution (sometimes as “amber light”).
(8) As “amber alert”, a public notification of a child
abduction (North America), named in memory of Amber Rene Hagerman (1986–1996);
technically AMBER Alert, referencing the backronym America's Missing: Broadcasting Emergency Response.
(9) In biology, genetics & biochemistry, the stop
codon (nucleotide triplet) "UAG", or a mutant which has this stop
codon at a premature place in its DNA sequence. UAG is named “amber” because the first to
isolate the mutation was then California Institute of Technology (Caltech) graduate
student Harris Bernstein (b 1961), whose surname is the German word for the
resin known as amber.
(10) A female given name.
(11) In automotive lighting (often as “the ambers”), the lights
of that color mounted so to be visible at all corners or an automobile which
flash sequentially in indicate a driver’s intention to turn, change lanes etc
(thus known various as “flashers”, “turn-signals” and even “trafficators” (the
(originally mechanical) semaphore signals which when activated protruded from
the bodywork of a vehicle to indicate an intention to turn in the direction of
the illuminated device). They’re used
also as warning lights (four-way flashers) when all flash in unison. Since the late 1950s, in most markets their
positioning, luminosity and rate of flashing has been regulated (sometimes in unfortunately
contradictory ways.
1350–1400: From the Middle English ambre & aumbre, from
the Old French, from the Medieval Latin ambra,
from the Arabic عَنْبَر (ʕanbar) (ambergris), from the Middle Persian ʾnbl (ambar) (ambergris). It displaced the Middle English smulting (from the Old English smelting (amber)) and the Old English eolhsand (amber), glær (amber) and sāp (amber,
resin, pomade). The seemingly strange
confusion between the fossilized tree resin and the ash-colored secretion of
the sperm whale’s intestine (ambergris) is assumed to have arisen because the dissimilar
substances both were rare, valuable and found on the seacoast. The word ambergris came into use in the West
during the Crusades. In English, amber came
to be used as an adjective by circa 1500 and it was in use as the name of a
color by 1735. Amber is a noun, verb & adjective, amberlike, ambery,
anberish, amberesque & amberous are adjectives, ambering & ambered are
verbs; the noun plural is ambers.
Actor Amber Heard (b 1986) who seems to have a thing for 1968 Ford
Mustangs.
In Europe, the word amber was picked up to describe the fossil
resins found on the shores of the Baltic first in the late thirteenth century
in Anglo-Latin which, by the turn of the fifteenth had entered English. Over time, this meaning prevailed and ambergris
came to be restricted to the whale’s secretions although there has long been a
faction of the etymology community which has suggested it’s not impossible amber
is an unrelated word of unknown origin.
Once they were distinguished as white or yellow amber for the Baltic
fossil resin and gray amber for the whale’s contribution, French distinguishing
between the two as ambre jaune and ambre gris.
Among her inventory of beauty care essentials, Lindsay
Lohan lists the long-serving Dior Backstage Eyeshadow Palette in Amber Neutrals
as her “favorite eye palette”
In a chemical coincidence, the solidified tree resin possesses
remarkable static electricity properties and Baltic amber was known to the
Romans as electrum, able to gain a negative electrical charge merely through
friction and although rarely used as such, it’s a fine insulator. In the Old Testament the Hebrew חַשְׁמַל (chashmal) is
translated variously as “a shining metal” or “the gemstone amber” but as the
light plays upon amber it can recall fire or lightning, the impression
strengthened when the substance is stimulated to spark and crackle with static
electricity. The prophet Ezekiel clearly
had witnessed the electrical phenomenon and although he'd not have understood
the science, in his vision of God’s throne, Ezekiel wrote:
“On this throne
high above was a figure whose appearance resembled a man. From what appeared to
be his waist up, he looked like gleaming chashmal, flickering like a fire. And from his waist down, he looked like a burning
flame, shining with splendor.”
(Ezekiel 1:26–27)
It was the Lithuania-born journalist Eliezer Ben‑Yehuda (1858–1922) who re-established the Hebrew language as living
tongue to be used in everyday life. In
the late nineteenth century, except for a handful of scholars, Hebrew was used
only as a Holy language, restricted to prayer and worship in the synagogue, Yiddish the only recognizably Jewish language spoken on the street or
in the home. Something of a prophet
himself, he created the first Israeli Hebrew newspaper and dictionary and to
make it useful in the modern age, he had to create many new words and one was
needed to describe electricity, then a concept understood for little more than
a century. He chose chashmal. When the Hebrew
Scriptures were first translated into Greek some 2,100 years ago, the Hebrew chashmal became the Ancient Greek ἤλεκτρον (ḗlektron) and could be used to refer to the gemstone but was used also in the manner of the Phoenician elēkrŏn
(shining light). Seventeenth century English
scientists who conducted some of the earliest experiments which began to
explain the phenomenon called it electrikus
(like amber) and from this came the Modern English electricity. Ben‑Yehuda’s work was popularized by Judah Leib Gordon (1830-1892), a leading poet of the nineteenth
century Jewish Enlightenment whose words were more lyrical than the dry,
journalistic lists of Ben-Yehuda would write: “The light, the heat, the steam,
and the electricity (chashmal), all
nature’s forces are the angels above.”
He added in an explanatory footnote: “By chashmal (hash-ma-LA), I mean the natural force that is electritzitat, since the Greek
translation of chashmal is elektrika.”
Immortality of sorts: An unfortunate gecko, trapped in
amber 54 million years ago.
The first AMBER Alert, 1996.
The amber alert is a system used in North America to
provide public notification of a child abduction (North America), named in
memory of Amber Rene Hagerman (1986–1996).
Technically it’s AMBER Alert, referencing the backronym of America's Missing: Broadcasting Emergency
Response. Then aged nine, Amber
Hagerman was abducted and murdered in 1996 and a campaign was organized which
demanded protocols be established to alert the local population of details
which might assist in finding the child (description of suspects, vehicle
registration numbers etc). Initially,
the vectors of transmission were local radio and television stations but as
technology evolved, other were added including platforms on the internet such
as e-mail & social media, electronic traffic-condition signs, advertising billboards
and SMS text messages delivered to cell phones.
Most succiniferous: The Amber Room, Catherine Palace, St. Petersburg, 1917. This is the only known color image of the room.
Last seen (in crates) in 1945, it was either destroyed in the last days of World War II (1939-1945) or dissembled and hidden somewhere or otherwise disposed of. Between 1979-2003, with early funding from the Federal Republic of Germany (the FRG, the old West Germany), a replica was built and installed in the Catherine Palace. The golden, jewel-encrusted creation, rendered by artisans and craftsmen from tons of amber, was a gift to Peter the Great (Peter I, 1672-1725; Tsar of Russia 1682-1725) in 1716, celebrating the conclusion of an alliance between Russia and Prussia. Much admired during the centuries in which it endured wars, pandemics and revolutions, it was looted by the Nazis in the final months of the war, packed into crates which subsequently vanished. Either they were lost or destroyed in the chaos or hidden away.
Originally installed in the Charlottenberg Palace of Friedrich I (1657–1713; King of Prussia 1701–1713), the Amber Room was a genuine multi-national venture, the design by Andreas Schlüter (1659–1714), a German sculptor in the baroque tradition, the bulk of the construction by the Danish craftsman Gottfried Wolfram (1646-1716), already famous for his skill in rendering amber. It took over a decade to build and upon completion, Peter the Great expressed his wonderment and in 1716, Frederick William I (1688–1740; King of Prussia 1713-1740) presented it to the Tsar, part of his diplomatic effort to secure the Prussian-Russian alliance against Sweden. Accordingly, along with a selection of paintings, the room was crated and shipped to Saint Petersburg where it remained until in 1755 it was moved to the Catherine Palace (Tsarskoye Selo (Tasar's Palace)) in Pushkin. Now installed in a larger space, the Italian designer Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli (1700–1771) was engage to remodel the assembly to suit, addition amber panels shipped from Berlin. Renovations and refinements continued to be undertaken during the eighteenth century and when complete, the room covered some 180 square feet (16.7 m3) and contained some six tons (6100 kg) of amber, semi-precious stones and gold leaf. At the time, it was thought one of the wonders of the modern world.
In the Nazi mind, not only was the Amber Room of German origin but such treasures anyway belonged only in the Reich and it was added to the (long) list of artworks to be looted as part of Operation Barbarossa (the 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union). As the Wehrmacht advanced on Pushkin, the Russian curators began to attempt to disassemble the panels but their fragility was such it was quickly realized any work done in haste would cause only destruction. Accordingly, they had carpenters construct a frame over which was glued wallpaper, there not being time even to construct a false wall. Not fooled, the Nazi looters removed the entire structure, shipping it to be installed in the Königsberg Castle Museum (now in the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad) on the Baltic coast. However, the tide of the war turned and in 1943 the museum's director received from Berlin instructions to return the room to crates and this had be accomplished by August 1944 when allied bombing raids severely damaged the castle. Quite what happened to the crates remains unknown. It may be they were destroyed during the war or were in the hold of a ship sunk in the Baltic but the tales of them being hidden somewhere has never gone away and continues to tantalize, a solitary panel actually found in Bremen in 1997. The replica room, dedicated in a ceremony in 2004 by Vladimir Putin (b 1952; president or prime minister of Russia since 1999) and Gerhard Schröder (b 1944, Chancellor of Germany 1998-2005) remains on public display at the Tasrskoye State Museum Reserve outside Saint Petersburg.
The "tombstone" headlamps on the 1959 Mercedes-Benz W111 sedans (the so-called Heckflosse) were a variation of the style introduced in 1957 on the 300 SL roadsters (W198) and while much admired, were not lawful for use in the US so a "stacked" arrangement was devised which came informally to be known as "Californian". So attractive was it found in Europe that ultimately it became available in the rest of the world (RoW) but with one difference: the factory's solution of integrating the amber turn-signal indicators (the "ambers" or "flashers" to many) and side-marker lamps into the assembly was elegant but didn’t comply with the rules. As explained by automotive lighting expert Daniel Stern, the lit area was probably compliant (the rules specified a minimum 3½ square inches (22.5 cm2) but the intensity and inboard visibility angles would have been inadequate. A turn signal with its centre 4 inches (100 mm) or closer to the low-beam lamp had to provide at least 500 candela on-axis, which would be close to impossible for a lamp with this construction; turn signals more than 4 inches from the low-beam needed only to provide at least 200 candela. The RoW cars (left) were supplied with the original design while for the US market some rather ugly after-market lamps were crudely added to the gaps next to the grill (centre). Late in the 1960s, the aesthetics were improved somewhat by using a larger unit (right) which emulated the look of a fog-lamp, the US cars by then also suffering the addition of side-marker lights front & rear.