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RECORD NUMBER: 358 OF 394

Main Title The last sorcerers : the path from alchemy to the periodic table /
Author Morris, Richard,
Publisher Joseph Henry Press,
Year Published 2003
OCLC Number 52559068
ISBN 0309089050; 9780309089050; 0309505933; 9780309505932; 0309095077; 9780309095075
Subjects Chemistry--History ; Alchemy ; Chemie ; Alchemie ; Alchemy--Biography ; Chemistry--Biography
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://books.nap.edu/catalog/10722.html
ebrary http://site.ebrary.com/id/10046882
Bibliographic record display http://www.netLibrary.com/urlapi.asp?action=summary&v=1&bookid=101962
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
EHAM  QD11.M86 2003 Region 1 Library/Boston,MA 04/30/2004
EJBM  QD11.M86 2003 Headquarters Library/Washington,DC 05/25/2005
Collation xi, 282 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-264) and index.
Contents Notes
The four elements -- Prelude to the birth of chemistry -- The skeptical chemist -- The discovery of the elements -- A nail for the coffin -- "Only an instant to cut off that head" -- The atom -- Problems with atoms -- The periodic law -- Deciphering the atom --: the continuing search. What we now call chemistry began in the cauldrons of mystics and sorcerers seeking not to make a better world through science, but rather to make themselves rich. But among these early magicians, frauds, and con artists were a few far-seeing alchemists who, through rigorous experimentation, transformed mysticism into science. Scientific historians generally credit the great 18th-century French chemist Antoine Lavoisier with modernizing chemistry. Exacting by nature, Lavoisier performed experiments that would provide lasting and verifiable proofs of various chemical theories. Another pioneer emerged almost 100 years later: Dimitri Mendeleev, an eccentric genius, sought to answer the most pressing questions that remained: Why did some elements have properties that resembled those of others? Were there certain natural groups of elements? And, if so, how many, and what elements fit into them? It was Mendeleev who finally constructed the first Periodic Table in the late 1800s. --From publisher description.