Medieval miners looking for copper in the German
Ore Mountains would sometimes find a red mineral, superficially resembling copper ore. Upon attempting extraction, no copper was produced, and subsequently, the miners would be afflicted with mysterious illness. They blamed a mischievous sprite of German mythology, Nickel (similar to
Old Nick) for besetting the copper (German: Kupfer). This German equivalent of "copper-nickel" was used as early as 1694 (other old German synonyms are
Rotnickelkies and
Arsennickel). In 1751, Baron
Axel Fredrik Cronstedt was attempting to extract copper from kupfernickel mineral, and obtained instead a white metal which he named "nickel", after the sprite. In modern German, Kupfernickel and Kupfer-Nickel designates the alloy
Cupronickel. The names subsequently given to the ore,
nickeline from
F. S. Beudant, 1832, and
niccolite, from J. D. Dana, 1868, refer to the presence of
nickel; in Latin,
niccolum. In 1971, the
International Mineralogical Association recommended use of the name nickeline rather than niccolite. == Occurrence ==