| Click the element's name to read about the honored scientist and the element´s discovery and to view photographs: | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atomic # & Symbol |
Element | Scientist | Atomic # & Symbol |
Element | Scientist | |
| 96 Cm | Curium | Pierre & Marie Curie | 103 Lr | Lawrencium | Ernest Lawrence | |
| 99 Es | Einsteinium | Albert Einstein | 104 Rf | Rutherfordium | Ernest Rutherford | |
| 100 Fm | Fermium | Enrico Fermi | 106 Sg | Seaborgium | Glenn Seaborg | |
| 101 Md | Mendelevium | Dmitri Mendeleev | 107 Bh | Bohrium | Niels Bohr | |
| 102 No | Nobelium | Alfred Nobel | 109 M | Meitnerium | Lise Meitner | |
| 111 Rg | Roentgenium | Wilhelm Röntgen | ||||
| Two other elements were named for minerals which previously had been named for people. | ||||||
| Atomic # & Symbol |
Element | Mineral Engineer | Atomic # & Symbol |
Element | Chemist | |
| 62 Sm | Samarium | V.E. Samarski-Bykhovets | 64 Gd | Gadolinium | Sir Johan Gadolin | |
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| introduction | alchemy | planets | other celestial objects | color | other properties | myths | minerals | ore mines | other places | combination names |
| to site menu | Introduction to Development of Periodic Chart |
18th Century vocabulary, & index of people |
chemistry | physics | ||||||
| created 1 January 2001 latest revision 16 June 2007 |
by D Trapp | |||||||||