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         Chemistry History A - H:     more books (83)
  1. AMBIX: The Journal of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Early Chemistry
  2. A History of the Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry (Chemists and Chemistry) by P.E. Verkade, 1985-02-18
  3. Science Since 1500: a Short History of Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry by H.T. PLEDGE, 1939
  4. Science Since Fifteen-Hundred: A Short History of Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Biology by H. T. Pledge, 1985-06
  5. Experiment, Models, Paper Tools: Cultures of Organic Chemistry in the Nineteenth Century.(Book Review): An article from: Canadian Journal of History by Trevor H. Levere, 2004-04-01
  6. Water Encyclopedia: Oceanography; Meteorology; Physics and Chemistry; Water Law; and Water History, Art, and Culture (Water Encyclopedia)
  7. Raman Spectroscopy in Archaeology and Art History
  8. Chemists and Chemistry in Nature and Society 1770-1878 (Variorum Collected Studies, No 439) by Trevor H. Levere, 1994-04
  9. Chemistry Transformed: The Paradigmatic Shift from Phlogiston to Oxygen (Modern Sociology) by H. Gilman McCann, 1978-06
  10. Chemistry and the Chemical Industry in the 19th Century: The Henrys of Manchester and Other Studies (Collected Studies, 575) by Wilfred Vernon Farrar, 1997-05
  11. Cheminformatics Developments: History, Reviews and Current Research
  12. Synthetic and Natural Phenols (Studies in Organic Chemistry) (Studies in Organic Chemistry) by J.H.P. Tyman, 1996-08-01
  13. Disposable Diapers: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Chemistry: Foundations and Applications</i> by Catherine H. Banks, 2004
  14. A History of the Dow Chemical Physics Laboratory: The Freedom the Bo Creative by Ray H. Boundy, 1990-07-17

21. HISTORY OF SCIENCE/SCIENCE STUDIES REFERENCE SOURCES
Scudder, Samuel H. Catalogue of scientific serials of all countries A guide to archivesand manuscript collections in the history of chemistry and chemical
http://gort.ucsd.edu/ds/initial.html
The author of this guide is Doug Stewart.
Note: UCSD users of this guide can check ROGER for local holdings.
This site has moved. You will be redirected in 3 seconds. If not, please go to http://www.wsulibs.wsu.edu/hist-of-science/
New additions /
updated January 13, 2002.
PART ONE
BIBLIOGRAPHIC GUIDES AND HANDBOOKS

SPECIALIZED INDEXES FOR HISTORY OF SCIENCE

DICTIONARIES, ENCYCLOPEDIAS,AND CHRONOLOGIES

BIOGRAPHICAL SOURCES
...
LIBRARY, ARCHIVAL AND MANUSCRIPT COLLECTIONS

PART TWO BIBLIOGRAPHIES
Brush, Stephen G. The history of modern science: a guide to the second scientific revolution, 1800-1950 Ames: Iowa State University Press, 1988. Companion to the history of modern science . Edited by R.C. Olby. London: Routledge, 1990. Corsi, Pietro. Information sources in the history of science and medicine . Boston: Butterworth Scientific, 1983. Durbin, Paul. A guide to the culture of science, technology, and medicine . New York: Free Press, 1980. Hessenbruch, Arne, editor. Reader's guide to the history of science. London: Fitzroy Dearborn, 2000.

22. Bluetree Directory - History
of chemistry.htm; webserver.lemoyne.edu/faculty/giunta/; www.accessexcellence.org/AE/AEC/CC/historicalbackground.html; www.cems.umn.edu/~aiche ug/history/h intro
http://bluetree.primateonline.com/dir/d!Top/Science/Chemistry/History
History
Top/Science/Chemistry/History
This directory contains some of the finest web sites in the web today. Here you can quickly and easily find anything you are looking for. We take great pride in our directory and are adding to it daily so come back often.
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Monday, June 07, 2004
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Atkins Supplements Belly Dance Blackberry ... Chemistry History

23. FECS Working Party On The History Of Chemistry - Calendar Of Historical Events
Adolf Butanandt, H Hellmann and E Renz gave a new and improved synthesis of d,1tryptophan; Go to Working Party on history of chemistry Homepage.
http://www.chemsoc.org/networks/enc/fecs/fecshistoryevent.htm
FECS Working Part on the History of Chemistry
Dates of important chemical events of 50, 100, 150 ... years ago from 1999
General Chemistry
750 years ago
  • University of Oxford founded
350 years ago
  • Schroeder describes two methods of preparing metallic arsenic
250 years ago
  • Charles Wood describes for the first time, in a penetrative manner, the metal platinum Pierre Joseph Macquer edits "Elémens de Chimie Theorique" with which he broadcast chemistry in the days before Lavoisier
200 years ago
  • Gilberts Annalen founded The Royal Institution of Great Britain founded Joseph Priestley discovers carbon monoxide Joseph Louis Proust researches the constant composition weights of chemical compounds
150 years ago
  • Journal of the Chemical Society of London founded Thomas Graham studies diffusion of liquids Auguste Bravais researches the inner structure of crystals
100 years ago
  • Setting up of the International Commission for Atomic Weights James Dezvar prepares solid hydrogen Herbert Smith constructs a three beam goniometer for measuring, eg. crystal angles and optical activity of crystals

24. History
the 1813 book Elements of Agricultural chemistry, by Sir as the first in recordedhistory to promote soil acidity resulted from exchangeable H + . For example
http://www.cropsoil.uga.edu/s2/text/history.html
    A BRIEF HISTORY OF SOIL CHEMISTRY
    by L. S. Sonon, M. A. Chappell and V.P. Evangelou
    IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY
    AGRONOMY DEPARTMENT
    AMES, IA In the Beginning The emergence of the discipline we call "Soil Chemistry" began with the early observations by experimenters concerning the ability of soils to modify solutions. In 1819, the Italian chemist, Gazzeri , observed that liquid manure, once passed over clay particles became discolored without losing its soluble substances. In similar work, Huxtable noticed in 1848 that soils also served to deodorize liquid manure. The study of soils as a chemical entity formerly began with J. Thomas Way Way became familiar with the work of H.S. Thompson, who reported in 1845 that when he leached a soil column with ammonium sulfate, to his surprise, calcium sulfate ran out the other end. Experimenting with different soils, pipe clays, and some "home-made" alumino-silicates, Way demonstrated that soils could retain cations such as NH , K , and Na , in exchange for equivalent amounts of Ca ions. With time

25. BBC - H2g2 - History Of Chemistry - Acids And Bases - A708257
Everything / Science Technology / chemistry history of chemistry theory has manyadherents among chemistry students called proton or abbreviated H + ) to the
http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/alabaster/A708257
@import url('/includes/tbenh.css') ; Home
TV

Radio

Talk
... Advanced Search New visitors: Returning BBCi members: Everything Chemistry
History of Chemistry - Acids and Bases

The entry Acidity and Basicity explains what acids and bases are. In essence, acids and bases are a way of classifying substances according to a very special form of reaction, namely the exchange of protons between chemical compounds. For more information please consult that entry. The historic evolution of the concepts 'acid' and 'base' is another topic altogether. That's what this entry is about. In a first attempt to characterise substances, the concepts of acids and bases were loosely defined as substances that change some properties of water. Much later (in the 19th Century) the composition of acids and bases was elucidated, bringing a very narrow definition of acids and bases. These concepts evolved even further to become broader again, yet still very fuzzily defined. These concepts are a very useful tool in chemical reasoning. Nowadays, virtually anything can be seen as an acid or a base. In the Beginning The starting point for most of the scientific historical evolutions is, as usual, the Mediterranean region in BC-times, Greece in particular. There, some smart people were trying to unravel nature's secrets. One first step in that direction was to sort all kinds of substances in an attempt to characterise nature.

26. History Of Chemistry
Brock, William H. The Chemical Tree A history of chemistry (previouslypublished as the Norton history of chemistry; 1st Edition;
http://www.umsl.edu/~chemist/cgi-test/mybooks.pl?category=17

27. Selected Classic Papers From The History Of Chemistry
Extensive collection of interesting and important papers.
http://maple.lemoyne.edu/~giunta/papers.html
Selected Classic Papers
from the
History of Chemistry
The following papers from the history of chemistry are available as html files. Many are seminal papers in their fields. Some are interesting curiosities. Papers are arranged by subject below, or alphabetically Most of the entries reside either at the Classic Chemistry site at Le Moyne College or on the historical papers section of John Park's ChemTeam site. Links to classic papers outside the Classic Chemistry site are clearly credited.
Analytical, instrumental, and spectroscopic techniques

28. Professor Hal Harris
(Oct 1997). (Book review) Harris, Harold H. The chemistry Parallels Between Adolescents Conception of Gases and the history of chemistry , CJ Furio Mas
http://www.umsl.edu/~harris/
Harold H. Harris Professor Harris received his B.S. degree from Harvey Mudd College, and his Ph.D. from Michigan State University. He joined the UM-St. Louis Chemistry faculty in 1970 following a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of California-Irvine. He has spent leaves at University of Chicago, the Solar Energy Research Institute (Golden, Colorado), and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base (Dayton, Ohio). You may e-mail Prof. Harris at: Research Interests Over the years, Professor Harris has published research in several areas of physical chemistry: collision-induced dissocation of ions, chemical kinetics at suprahigh pressure, experimental and theoretical dynamics of molecular and ionic collisions, and the dynamics of cellular flames. Since he accepted a joint appointment in the College of Education as well as in the Chemistry Department of the College of Arts and Sciences, the focus of his work has tended increasingly toward science education.
Professor Harris originated and currently edits " The Chemical Education Resource Shelf " (CERS), an online feature of the

29. ScienceDaily -- Browse Topics: Science/Chemistry/History/Boyle,_Robert
Top Science chemistry history Boyle, Robert The water hustlers by Robert H. Boyle1971. 4. Books Robert Boyle A Free Enquiry into the Vulgarly
http://www.sciencedaily.com/directory/Science/Chemistry/History/Boyle,_Robert
Match: sort by: relevance date
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Real Estate Lookup Front Page Today's Digest Week in Review Email Updates ... History Boyle, Robert (1 links) News about Boyle, Robert Prevalence Of Pediatric Metabolic Syndrome Increases As Children Become More Obese (June 7, 2004) full story Evidence Of Nanobacterial-like Structures Found In Human Calcified Arteries And Cardiac Valves (May 25, 2004) full story Folic Acid Fortification Needed To Lower Neural Tube Defect Risks (May 21, 2004) full story Prostate Cancer Marker Could Lead To Earlier Diagnosis Say Pittsburgh Researchers (May 11, 2004) full story FDA To Determine Health Significance Of Low Furan Levels In Foods (May 11, 2004) full story [ More news about Boyle, Robert

30. Titles ("H"), Authors, Call#s & Subjects
2. Physics Tables. 3. chemistry - Handbooks, manuals, etc. 919.69 BOR 1.Hawaii - Histoire Hawaii pono a social history / Lawrence H. Fuchs.
http://www.ardsleyschools.k12.ny.us/AHSL_WEB/ti-h.htm
H. M. S. Ulysses. FIC MAC
1. World War, 1939-1945 - Fiction.
The HAB theory: a novel by Allan W. Eckert. FIC ECK
The Habsburg curse [by] Hans Holzer. 943.6 HOL
1. Habsburg, House of.
The Habsburgs: portrait of a dynasty. 943.6 CRA
1. Austria - Politics and government.
2. Habsburg, House of - History.
Had you been born in another faith: the story of religion as it is lived and loved by those who follow the path of their parental faith. Illustrated by Polly Bolian. 290 BAC
1. Religions.
Hadrian VII: a play. With an introd. by Herbert Weinstock. Based on Hadrian the Seventh and other works by Frederick Rolfe, "Baron Corvo.". 822 LUK
1. Rolfe, Frederick, - Baron Corvo, - 1860-1913. - Hadrian the Seventh.
The haiku handbook: how to write, share, and teach haiku William J. Higginson with Penny Harter. 808.1 HIG
1. Haiku - Technique.
2. Haiku - History and criticism.
The haj Leon Uris. FIC URI
Half slave and half free: the roots of civil war Bruce Levine ; Eric Foner, consulting editor. 973.7 LEV
1. United States - History - Civil War, 1861-1865. - Causes.
2. United States - History - 1783-1865. ...
4. Slavery - United States - History.
Half the world: the history and culture of China and Japan. Texts E. Glahn [and others] Edited by Arnold Toynbee. .

31. History Of Chemistry At ChemIndustry.com
9. Kansas State University Department of chemistry history Personnel Research FacultyNongraduate Faculty Staff Postdoctoral Fellows Graduate Students Emeritus
http://www.chemindustry.com/chemnames/H/history_of_chemistry.asp
Search the chemical world All Categories Chemical Suppliers Industry Services Resources Organizations Software Laboratory Supplies Academic Institutes Search Help
Found 869485 Pages for history of chemistry Featured Supplier (Ad.) Word Count: history (829662), chemistry (1760726), of (38912594)
Get listed in this page
and reach more chemical industry professionals. Classic Papers from the History of Chemistry Technical info. United States Collection of classic papers on various topics of chemistry.
URL: http://dbhs.wvusd.k12.ca.us/Chem-History/Classic-Papers-Menu.html in English [ Translate in Category
More relevant pages from this site

    Classic Papers from the History of Chemistry
    Collection of classic papers on various topics of chemistry.
    URL: http://dbhs.wvusd.k12.ca.us/Chem-History/Classic-Papers-Menu.html
    Pagesize: 0K bytes - Language: English [ Translate History of Chemistry Technical info. United States Resource providing a list of outstanding chemists who made substantial contribution to the various areas of chemistry. For each chemist a review of his scientific work is given.
    URL: http://www.woodrow.org/teachers/chemistry/institutes/1992/

32. History Of Chemistry Chemical Information
Find additional information about history of chemistry at Access titles, abstractsand citations from top journals in organic and related chemistry.
http://www.chemindustry.com/chemicals/search/H/history_of_chemistry.asp
Chemical: Enter a chemical name, CAS Number, or molecular formula. Use * for partial names (i.e. chloro*) No items found, please enter another query Find additional information about history of chemistry at: Access titles, abstracts and citations from top journals in organic and related chemistry. There is over 750,000 articles in the Beilstein database, from over 140 journals! Click here. Chemical properties, names and structures NIST WebBook by the National Institute of Standards and Technology ChemIDplus by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) MatWeb by Automation Creations, Inc. ChemExper by ChemExper NCI Database by W. D. Ihlenfeldt, Computer Chemistry Center, Institute of Organic Chemistry, Univ. of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany SDBS (Spectral data) by the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan Merck ChemDat Sigma Aldrich Safety and toxicology data ToxNet by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) ChemFate by the Syracuse Research Corporation Vermont SIRI by the University of Vermont Cornell University Chemistry dictionary Acronyms Database by Indiana University, Chemistry library

33. The History Of Soil Chemistry
by the 1813 book Elements of Agricultural chemistry, by Sir Ruffin as the first inrecorded history to promote the work in 1953 which showed Hclays (prepared
http://www.agron.iastate.edu/soilchemistry/History of Soil Chemistry.htm
A BRIEF HISTORY OF SOIL CHEMISTRY by L. S. Sonon, M. A. Chappell and V.P. Evangelou (deceased) IOWA STATE UNIVERSITY AGRONOMY DEPARTMENT AMES, IA In the Beginning Ion Exchange Soil Mineralogy and Ion Fixation Soil Acidity and Alkalinity ... Future Challenges In the Beginning The emergence of the discipline we call "Soil Chemistry" began with the early observations by experimenters concerning the ability of soils to modify solutions. In 1819, the Italian chemist, Gazzeri, observed that liquid manure, once passed over clay particles became discolored without losing its soluble substances. In similar work, Huxtable noticed in 1848 that soils alsoserved to deodorize liquid manure. The study of soils as a chemical entity formerly began with J. Thomas Way. Way became familiar with the work of H.S. Thompson, who reported in 1845 that when he leached a soil column with ammonium sulfate, to his surprise, calcium sulfate ran out the other end. Experimenting with different soils, pipe clays, and some "home-made" alumino-silicates, Way demonstrated that soils could retain cations such as NH , K , and Na , in exchange for equivalent amounts of Ca ions. With time, Way managed to refine (and in some cases correct) his initial conclusions about soils behaving as cation exchangers, thus earning him the title, the "Father of Soil Chemistry.

34. Chemistry Is Not The Science: Rudolf, Rhetoric, And Reduction
The Holocaust history Project has three technical papers that address Rudolf quotes The chemistry of Auschwitz Dissociation of HCN to H 3 O + and CN (HCN is
http://www.holocaust-history.org/auschwitz/chemistry/not-the-science/
by Richard J. Green
and Jamie McCarthy
"Forensic chemistry is, I repeat, an exact science." Holocaust-denier David Irving,
introduction to the Leuchter Report, 1988 "[C]hemistry is not the science which can prove or refute any allegations about the Holocaust 'rigorously'." Holocaust-denier and chemist Germar Rudolf,
response to Rich Green, 1998
Introduction
Rigorous Proof and Exact Science
The so-called forensic reports of Leuchter, and Rudolf have for some time been used by Holocaust deniers as their chief argument - their ace in the hole - against the veracity of mass murder by gassing at Auschwitz-Birkenau. The argument goes that what is physically impossible cannot be true, no matter what testimonial evidence, documentary evidence, or physical evidence is amassed to demonstrate it. No number of witnesses suffices to prove that water can run uphill, and likewise all evidence regarding the Holocaust could be wiped away, if deniers could only prove that gassings were physically impossible. Thus it is, in the literature of denial, that we see great weight given to these three reports. In the late 1980s Leuchter was cited with great frequency, and now that distinction is gradually being passed to the work of Germar Rudolf. Possibly the pivotal moment in this line of argumentation came in 1988 when David Irving was so influenced by the Leuchter Report that he stepped into the deniers' camp - or at least, when the story is told, Leuchter gets credit for the conversion. The epiphany took place just before his testimony at the trial of Ernst Zundel. As described by Robert Lenski in

35. A History Of Computational Chemistry
that have more columns than rows (Wold, S., Ruhe, A., Wold, H., and Dunn Select alocation to obtain a history of the computational chemistry companies in
http://www.netsci.org/Science/Compchem/feature17a.html
A History of Computational Chemistry
Allen B. Richon
Molecular Solutions, Inc.
1116 Miller Mountain Road
Saluda, NC 28773-8677
E-mail:abrichon@molsol.com
http://www.netsci.org/Science/Compchem/feature17a.html
Originally Published October, 1996
Updated as New Information is Received
Introduction
W hile there were several papers detailing the use of computers in chemistry during the 1960s and 1970s, the first companies organized to address the new areas of chemical databases and molecular modeling were Molecular Design, Ltd. (1978) and Tripos Associates, Inc. (1979) respectively. As the chart below demonstrates, the market grew and evolved continuously since this period and currently is comprised of approximately 20 companies ( A horizontal scrolling history and a vertical scrolling history also are available). There have been several individuals who have contributed to this history and who have corrected some of my mistakes. The author especially wishes to acknowledge Bruce Gelin and Phil Westmoreland for their contributions. If you have logos for any of the companies listed, especially those that were used in the company's early history, I would appreciate hearing from you!
1. Publications

36. The Vaults Of Erowid
Index of drugs, with physical effects, images, history, chemistry and law information for each. Articles and sections for wide variety of drug related material, including law, experiences, community, drug testing, spirituality, health, and artistic endeavors.
http://www.erowid.org/

37. Studium: New Lists: H Of Chemistry /h Of Science, Med & Technology
list has been set up to carry information and discussion related to the historyOF chemistry. 113 Sender HNet Latin-American history List H-LATAM@h-net
http://www.uni-heidelberg.de/subject/hd/fak7/hist/o1/logs/studium/log.started960
Marc Nelissen ( Marc.Nelissen@bib.kuleuven.ac.be
Mon, 17 Feb 1997 10:04:24 +0100
http://h-net.msu.edu/ http://h-net.msu.edu

38. History Of Chemistry At The University Of Graz
The outline of history follows the three organic, physical and theoretical chemistry(Places Universitätsplatz 1 H. Wittmann, E. Ziegler Die Entwicklung der
http://boch35.kfunigraz.ac.at/ifc-history/
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry[1923-1974]
Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry[1943-1982]
Organic and Pharmaceutical Chemistry [1941-1969]
Biochemistry [1963-1999] [since 2000] Institute of Chemistry
[since 2000] [Index of persons listed at the History pages] [Bibliographic data]
General
Chemistry at the University of Graz started in 1850 at the Old University, then the chemistry institute at the Karl-Franzens-University was built in 1878. In 1963 the Institute of Biochemistry was founded as an additional institute, and in 1969 Organic and Physical Chemistry moved to the new building at Heinrichstrasse. In the year 2000 five of the six chemistry institutes joined together and founded a large "institute of chemistry". The outline of history follows the three main sites, the specialized institutes which were splitted from the chemistry institute, and lists chairmen and chemists with venia legendi together with their most important research fields. The chemistry institute (1850-1878) The Chemistry Institute at the Old University site The chemistry institute (1878-1945) The chemistry institute in the new chemistry building at the Karl-Franzens University site Institute of physical and theoretical chemistry Institute of physical chemistry ... Institute of theoretical chemistry Splitting of the chemistry institute: Foundation of the institute of physical and theoretical chemistry, then further splitting into institutes of physical chemistry (

39. Chemistry Teaching Web Sites
guinta, Classical chemistry papers from the history of chemistry The following sitescontain free chemistry stuff. comments, send a message to h.hedgec@morehead
http://people.morehead-st.edu/fs/h.hedgec/sciteach.html
Chemistry Teaching Web Sites
This web site is designed to help chemistry teachers find useful information on the internet. There are a few of the more interesting and helpful sites listed below. This is not even the tip of the iceburg; there is much more information available, it is just a matter of finding it. I hope what I have listed so far is helpful to you. Remember that this site is still under construction! High School Chemistry Sites College Chemistry Sites Government Agencies Alta Vista Search Engine ... Free Stuff The following sites are of interest to both high school teachers and high school students. You may also want to check out the college sites as well. http://home.ptd.net/~swenger This site contains everything from what search engines to use to lab safety. This site is a must for all high school chemistry teachers.
http://www.chemplace.com This site if for students and teachers of all levels. You must purchase a membership.
  • printable resources and references
  • on-line activities
  • lab materials
  • teaching ideas and lesson plans
http://www.nsta.org/

40. Chemistry (03-04)
MTH 125. CHM 1142, College chemistry I, 4 SCH, CHM 111. CHM 1143, College chemistryII, 4 SCH, CHM 112. AREA IV history, Social Behavioral Sciences (12 SCH).
http://www.tsud.edu/community/Transfer_Art_2003-04/Physical_Science_(03-04).htm
Chemistry Major 126 Semester Hours (S C H) (Effective Fall Semester 2003)
We appreciate your interest in Troy State University Dothan (TSUD) . If you have printed out an A rticulation and General Studies Committee Approved Transfer guide for Chemistry, we would strongly recommend that you p rint this page and use it along with your AGSC guide. To minimize transfer problems and best prepare you to finish your program in the minimum hours required, you should take courses as outlined below. Thank you again for your interest in TSUD. Click here to view Area 5 Requirements AREA I - Written Composition (6 S C H) "Requirements include at least 6 semester hours in written composition." TSUD Alabama 2-Year College ENG 1101 3 S C H ENG 101 ENG 1102 3 S C H ENG 102 AREA II C H) "Requirements include at least 12 semester hours in humanities with a minimum of 3 semester hours in literature*, 3 semester hours in the arts, and the remaining semester hours from the humanities and/or fine arts." *As part of the General Studies Curriculum, students must complete a 6 semester hour sequence in history or literature.

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