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Elementymology & Elements Multidict by Peter van der Krogt
Strontium
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Multilingual dictionary
Indo-EuropeanLanguage key Germanic Strontium en de lb nl af fy da sv no fo Strontín is Italic Strontium fr Estroncio es gl Estronci ca oc Estrôncio pt Stronzio it Stronzi fur Strontziu ro Strontsiumu arm Slavic Стронций [stroncij] ru bg Стронцiй [stroncij] uk Стронцый [stroncyj] by Stront pl Starnt kas Stroncium cs sk Stroncij sl hr bos Стронциjум [stroncijum] sr Стронциум [stroncium] mk Baltic Stroncis lt Stroncijs lv Strāncijan sud Celtic Strontiwm cy Strointiam ga gd Stroinçhum gv Strontyum kw Strontiom br Other Indo-European Στροντιο [strontio] el Stroncium sq Ստրոնցիում [stronts'ium] hy Indo-Iranian Стронций [stroncij] oss Uralic Strontium fi Strontsium et Stroncium hu Стронти [stronti] mok Altaic Stronsiyum tr Стронций [stroncij] kk uz Stronci' tg Стронци [stronci] mn Other (Europe) Estrontzioa eu სტორცინიუმი [storc'iniumi] ka East- & South-Asia ストロンチウム [sutoronchiumu] ja 鍶 [si1 / si1] zh (mand./cant.) 스트논듐 or 스트론튬 [seuteurontyum] ko Stronti vi สทรอนเชียม [sathronchiam] th Strontium, Stronsium fi ms ஸ்ட்ரோண்டியம் [sţrōņţiyam] ta Afro-Asiatic سترانشيوم [istiruntiyūm] ar Stronzjum mt סטרונציום [strontsium] he Africa Stronti sw Artificial Stroncio eo New names Stronton (STR) aen Destroytissueum dms |
Appearance, some properties, a memory peg and a summary of discovery and etymology
History & Etymology
For the discovery of Strontium several chemists are credited: Cruikshank (1787), Crawford (1790), Hope (1791), Klaproth (1793), Kirwan (1794), and finally Davy (1808). The earliest chemical work on this mineral was by William Cruikshank in 1787, and by the Irish physician Adair Crawford (1748-1795) in 1790. They concluded that it contained a new earth. In September 1793, Martin Heinrich Klaproth published a paper describing a series of parallel experiments made with strontianite and witherite (barium carbonate). In 1794 he prepared Strontium oxide and Strontium hydroxide. On 4 November 1793 Thomas Hope (1766-1844), professor of chemistry in the University of Edinburgh, read to the Royal Society of Edinburgh a paper, summarised in the Society's Transactions in 1794 but not published in full until 1798, in which he reported that he began to work on the mineral from Strontian in 1791 and in a series of experiments he showed that it contained a "hitherto unknown kind of earth". He called the mineral strontianite and the new earth strontia after the locality of the mine. On 9 January 1794 the Irish chemist Richard Kirwan (1733-1812) read a paper to the Royal Irish Academy and described a number of careful experiments including the preparation of a number of salts of Strontium and of the oxide and hydroxide. W.P. Doyle, in his biography of Thomas Hope, concluded that "the original discovery of the individual nature of strontianite must be ascribed to Crawford and Cruickshank; while Klaproth, Hope and Kirwan contributed equally and independently to the examination of the properties of strontianite and to the preparation of several compounds of strontium and their differentiation from those of barium." In 1807-08 Sir Humphry Davy, who had previously isolated the elements Sodium, Potassium, Barium, Calcium and Magnesium, managed by similar techniques to isolate the unknown element from strontianite. In his paper read for the Royal Society of London on 30 June 1808, he referred to the new alkaline earth metals in this way (note):
Chemistianity 1873
KAYAN
STRONTIUM, from Ore first found at Strontian, Scotland, is a dark yellow colour'd metal; It speedily oxides in Air, or Water. Its Salts tinge candle flame a fine crimson; They act sometimes like Barium compounds. Further reading
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© Peter van der Krogt