Chemical elements/Bibliography: Difference between revisions

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* Norman E. Holden. (2001) [http://www.nndc.bnl.gov/content/origindc.pdf History of the Origin of the Chemical Elements and Their Discoverers.] Prepared for the 41st IUPAC General Assembly in Brisbane, Australia, June 29th - July 8th, 2001. | [http://www.nndc.bnl.gov/content/origindc.pdf Free PDF download.]
* Norman E. Holden. (2001) History of the Origin of the Chemical Elements and Their Discoverers. Prepared for the 41st IUPAC General Assembly in Brisbane, Australia, June 29th - July 8th, 2001. [http://www.nndc.bnl.gov/content/origindc.pdf PDF download.] "Origin" here refers to the origin of discovery on Earth.
** 'Origin' here refers to the 'origin of discovery' on Earth: "''....the origin of the chemical elements show a wide diversity with some of these elements having an origin in antiquity, other elements having been discovered within the past few hundred years and still others have been synthesized within the past fifty years via nuclear reactions on heavy elements since these other elements are unstable and radioactive and do not exist in nature.''"
** Sections:
*** Introduction
*** Determining The Names Of The Chemical Elements
*** Special Difficulties With The Rare Earth Elements
*** Controversial Heavy Elements
*** Individual Element Names And History
**** Alphabetical list by element name, giving the origin of their names and information on their discoverers and/or isolaters.


* Trapp D. (2007) [http://web.me.com/dtrapp/Elements/elements.html The Chemical Elements: Their Discovery and the Origins of their Names.]
* D. Trapp (2007) [http://web.me.com/dtrapp/Elements/elements.html The Chemical Elements: Their Discovery and the Origins of their Names.] A useful and interesting article.
** "This is an effort to present the history of the discovery of the chemical elements and the origins of their names in a way that is both useful and interesting. In some cases enough information is provided so that with adequate caution, an interested chemist might duplicate some of the historical chemistry that led to our current understanding.  It is hoped that the following screens provide an enjoyable way to learn more about the chemical elements that comprise our world."
 
*** [http://web.me.com/dtrapp/Elements/alchemical.html Origins of the Element Names: Substances Known by Alchemists.] Contents (#=atomic number): #47 Ag,  #79 Au,  #6 C,  #29 Cu,  #26 Fe,  #80 Hg,  #82 Pb,  #78 Pt,  #16 S,  #50 Sn
* Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. [http://education.jlab.org/itselemental/index.html The Periodic table of elements.] Clicking on an element brings up a page containing a wealth of information about that element.
*** [http://web.me.com/dtrapp/Elements/planets.html Origins of the Element Names: Elements Named for the 7 Planets Known to the Ancients]
 
*** [http://web.me.com/dtrapp/Elements/celestial.html Origins of the Element Names: Elements Named after "Modern" Celestial Objects.] Contents:  #2 He, #34 Se,  #46 Pd,  #52 Te,  #58 Ce,  #92 U,  #93 Np,  #94 Pu
*Giunta C. [http://Web.Lemoyne.Edu/~Giunta/Ea/Contents.Html Elements And Atoms: Case Studies In The Development Of Chemistry — Preface And Contents].
*** [http://web.me.com/dtrapp/Elements/color.html Origins of the Element Names: Elements Named for Color.] Contents:  #17 Cl,  #24 Cr,  #55 Cs,  #53 I,  #49 In,  #77 Ir,  #45 Rh,  #37 Rb,  #81 Tl
**"My intention here is to collect several articles by scientists who contributed to the development of knowledge about atoms and elements, and to provide sufficient background and commentary to place the work of these pioneers in context. In addition, I attempt to teach about how science is done by examining the work of particular scientists in their own words and adding to their articles annotations designed to emphasize the researchers' methodology."

Latest revision as of 04:42, 6 March 2024

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A list of key readings about Chemical elements.
Please sort and annotate in a user-friendly manner. For formatting, consider using automated reference wikification.
  • Norman E. Holden. (2001) History of the Origin of the Chemical Elements and Their Discoverers. Prepared for the 41st IUPAC General Assembly in Brisbane, Australia, June 29th - July 8th, 2001. PDF download. "Origin" here refers to the origin of discovery on Earth.
  • Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. The Periodic table of elements. Clicking on an element brings up a page containing a wealth of information about that element.
  • Giunta C. Elements And Atoms: Case Studies In The Development Of Chemistry — Preface And Contents.
    • "My intention here is to collect several articles by scientists who contributed to the development of knowledge about atoms and elements, and to provide sufficient background and commentary to place the work of these pioneers in context. In addition, I attempt to teach about how science is done by examining the work of particular scientists in their own words and adding to their articles annotations designed to emphasize the researchers' methodology."