History of the periodic table

  • 1862

    1862
    French scientist Alexandre Emile Beguyer de Chancourtis listed the elements on paper tape and wound them, spiral like, around a cylinder.
  • 1864

    English scientist John Newlands noticed that if the elements were arranged in order of atomic weight, there was a periodic table similar with 8'elements
  • 1869

    1869
    Lothar Myer complied a periodic table of 56 elements based on regular repeating pattern of physical properties such as molar volume. Again, the elements were arranged in order of increasing atomic weights.
  • 1869 continued

    1869 continued
    Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev produced a periodic table based on weights but arranged "periodically".
  • 1894

    1894
    William Ramsay discovered the mobile gas and realized that they made a new group on the periodic table
  • 1914

    1914
    Henry Mosley determined the atomic number of each known elements. He realized that if the elements were arranged in order of increasing atomic number rather than weight, they would fit better in the periodic table.
  • 1940

    1940
    Glenn Seaborg artificially produced heavy mass elements such as Neptune, these new elements were part of a new block called actinides
  • 1800's

    The discovery of elements over and above the nine known to the ancients and the four studied by medieval alchemists has been previously discussed. The gaseous elements, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, and chlorine, had all been discovered in the eighteenth century. So had the metals, cobalt, platinum, nickel, manganese, tungsten, molybdenum, uranium, titanium, and chromium.