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The man who discovered oxygen also invented seltzer. |
Science & Industry |
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When it comes to oxygen, Swedish chemist Carl Wilhelm Scheele actually studied the element in 1772, predating Priestley. However, Scheele's findings weren't published until 1777, allowing Priestley to conduct groundbreaking studies in the interim. On August 1, 1774, Priestley experimented by heating the red mercuric oxide of a candle to produce a then-mysterious colorless gas that was capable of supporting life. Two months later, Priestley presented his findings to French chemist Antoine Lavoisier, who conducted tests of his own, which proved to be more thorough and scientifically accurate. Priestley pushed back on Lavoisier's subsequent findings, instead embracing archaic scientific theories such as the existence of a fire-like element called phlogiston. Lavoisier persisted, however, and named the new gaseous element "oxygen," after the Greek "oxy genes," meaning "acid-forming." | |
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Samarium was the first element named after a person. | ||||||||||||||
Elements such as einsteinium and bohrium may have more famous eponyms, but the first periodic element named after a person was samarium. This rare earth metal — atomic number 62 — was discovered in 1879 after being isolated from the mineral samarskite, and was named for Vasili Samarsky-Bykhovets, a Russian mining official who granted access to mineral samples for scientific research. Samarsky-Bykhovets passed away in 1870, nine years before the element was christened in his honor, but two other elemental namesakes were lucky enough to witness their own personal tributes firsthand. Seaborgium was named after Glenn Seaborg — winner of the 1951 Nobel Prize for chemistry — in 1997, just two years before Seaborg's death. More recently, in 2016, the element oganesson was formally named after nuclear physicist Yuri Oganessian, the only periodic table eponym alive today. | ||||||||||||||
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