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History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360)
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History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Dec 17, 2015

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Page 1: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

History of the Periodic Table of the Elements

(CHEM 1360)Part 2

Page 2: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

REDISCOVERY OF

THE ELEMENTS —

following ancient footsteps

Page 3: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

European element discovery sites

Page 4: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The Highlands in Scotland

Page 5: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The Road to Strontian

Page 6: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Up from Strontian to the Mine

Entrance to the Mine

Page 7: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Climbing down into the Mine

Searching for a vein

Page 8: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Discovery! Alkaline earth carbonates and silicates

Page 9: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Mediterranean element discovery sites

Page 10: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Monte Palermo, “three French leagues from Bologna”

Page 11: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Discovery! Nuggets of fosforo di Bologna!

Page 12: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Fosforo di Bologna — Barite, BaSO4

Page 13: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Argillaceous matrix — i.e., clay and mud

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Early Mankind discovers a new substance with ductile, rather than brittle, failure

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Nubians deliver goldto their King

(Temple in Thebes)

Gold, most highlydesired of the metals

because of its eternal nature

Page 17: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Roa Montan, Romania — ancient Roman gold mine

Page 18: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Rosa Montana — wax tablet to entrance

Page 19: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Rosa Montana — enough room for one slave laborer

Page 20: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Silver Joachimthalers — etymological source of “dollar”

Page 21: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Thaler, 1561, minted in Sankt Joachim, Bohemia

Page 22: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Sankt Joachim, Bohemia —now Jáchymov, Czech Republic

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Copper vasefrom Cyprus

(Cyprus = cuprum)

The Canaanites (Hittites) with “iron

chariots”in the Book of Judges

Page 25: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Plato and Aristotle espouse a logical universe

The origin of the concept of “element” or “principle”

Page 26: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Macquer’s “Dictionnaire de Chymie,” 1777

Page 27: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The current concept of “Chemical Element,” as of 1777

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The Discoveryof Phosphorus

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The Birth of Science

Greek logic

Alchemicaldiscoveries

Religiousphilosophy

Aqua fortisSpiritus salus

Blue vitrolLiver of sulphurManna mercuriFlowers of zinc

etc., etc. . . .

By reason you can arrive at the truth, even when it is not intuitively obvious. . . .

There was a Beginning. . . .

There are Natural

Causes. . . .God works

through Natural Law

Page 34: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The Birth of Science

By experimentation andcareful reasoning we canarrive at these laws and

ultimate understanding. . . .

Alchemicaldiscoveries

Greek logic

Religiousphilosophy

Page 35: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.
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Falun Mine, Sweden — major copper mine that served the early miners

Page 37: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.
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Averting the Gnomesin the dark caves. . . .

The German wordfor gnome is “Kobold”

Cobaltite, CoAsS

Page 39: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The German word“Kupfernickel” means

copper devil

Annabergite, Ni3(AsO4)2•8H2O

Nicollite, NiAs

Page 40: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

German element discovery sites

Page 41: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Klatschmondblumen,Harz Mountains, Germany

Page 42: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Tilkerode, East Harz Mountains

Page 43: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Tilkerode, East Harz Mountains — selenium-rich ore, source of thallium

Page 44: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Lead ores

Minimum, Pb3O4

Cerrusite, PbCO3, “white wax”

Page 45: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Mercury ore“sweating”quicksilver

Page 46: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

East European element discovery sites

Page 47: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Touring across Romania. . . .

Page 48: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Gypsies panning and collecting gold in fleece(Daniel Edward Clarke, Nagyag, Romania, 1802)

Page 49: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Gypsies today. . . .

Page 50: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Hiking up the Transylvanians. . . .

Page 51: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Faa Bii, Romania — “forgotten” gold mine in the Transylvania Mountains

Page 52: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The mines have huge talus banks, rich in pyrites.

Page 53: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Fata Baii Mine, where tellurium was discovered —known originally by Hungarian name, “Fascebanya”

Page 54: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Romanian miners (and one Australian) at Faa Bii Mine

Page 55: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Britain element discovery sites

Page 56: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Hidden by a stream in Menaccan, Cornwall. . . .

Page 57: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Manaccan church, Cornwall, where Gregor preached

Page 58: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The Lord’s Prayer, in Cornish

Page 59: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Plaque in Manaccan Church

Page 60: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Panning for ilmenite, FeTiO3, the black sand that “follows the compass”

Page 61: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Scandinavian element discovery sites

Page 62: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Hisinger’s house, owner of Bastnäs Mineand mentor of Jöns Jacob Berzelius

Page 63: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Bengt Hogrelius with old Swedish chemistry text

Page 64: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The modest author does not include his name on the title page(Cronstedt, who discovered nickel)

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It is clear that a substance is beinggiven off. . . . I call it “phlogiston”

ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss

Page 68: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Phlogiston is a universal principle given off by:

combustion

calxing

respiration

Page 69: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The atmosphere doesn’t become saturated with phlogiston because plants remove it

Page 70: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

The world is thus a beautiful balanceincorporating the recycling of phlogiston

RespirationCombustionCalxing

Plants remove phlogiston

Page 71: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Prediction: Since a metal becomes heavierwhen it loses phlogiston to become a calx. . . .

Phlogiston

IronIron calx (rust)

Phlogiston musthave anti-gravity!

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Clapham mansion, where Cavendishperformed his classic experiments

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Lavoisier’s Elements, 1789

Page 81: History of the Periodic Table of the Elements (CHEM 1360) Part 2.

Lavoisier’s Elements

“Elements in the body”

“Earths”

“Nonmetallic elements”

“Metallic elements”

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