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What is the Periodic Table Showing? Periodicity

The INTERNET Database of Periodic Tables

There are thousands of periodic tables in web space, but this is the only comprehensive database of periodic tables & periodic system formulations. If you know of an interesting periodic table that is missing, please contact the database curator: Mark R. Leach Ph.D. The database holds information on periodic tables, the discovery of the elements, the elucidation of atomic weights and the discovery of atomic structure (and much, much more).

   Use the drop menus or search box (below) to Select or Search the 1400 entries in the database: 

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Periodic Tables from the year 1957:

1957   Mazurs' Graphical Representations of The Periodic System During 100 Years
1957   Laubengayer's Long Periodic Table
1957   Mazurs: Types of graphic representation of the periodic system of chemical elements


Year:  1957 PT id = 110, Type = review

Mazurs' Graphical Representations of The Periodic System During 100 Years

Edward Mazurs, Graphical Representations of The Periodic System During 100 Years, University of Alabama Press, 1957.

There is an internet archive: Edward G. Mazurs Collection of Periodic Systems Images.

This book gives a very full analysis and classification of periodic table formulations. Most of the formulations are redrawn.

However, anybody who is seriously interested in periodic table formulations will want to see/read/own this book. Read more about Mazrus on the Elements Unearthed blog.

 

 

1955

Mazurs' Valence Periodic Table (1974, p.94)

1955

Mazurs' Periodic Table (1974, p. 95)

1955

Mazurs' 1955 Formulation (1974, p. 44)

1958

Mazurs' 1958-73 Formulation (1974, endpaper)

1965

Mazurs' 1965 Formulation (1974, p/ 134)

1967

Mazurs' 1967 Formulation (1974. Inside front cover)

1967

Mazurs' other 1967 Formulation (1974, p. 126)

1967

Mazurs' another 1967 Formulation (1974, p. 134)

1969

Mazurs' Periodic System of Chemical Elements (1974, end foldout)

1974

Mazurs' Version of Janet's "Lemniscate" Formulation (1974, p.80)

1974

Marzus' Wooden Version of Mendeleev's Periodic Table (Chem. Heritage Foundn.)

1974

Mazurs' PT Formulation Analysis (1974, pp.15-16)

 

Many thanks to Philip Stewart for preparing the links table above.

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Year:  1957 PT id = 1079, Type = formulation

Laubengayer's Long Periodic Table

From A.W. Laubengayer, General Chemistry, revised ed., Holt, Reinhart and Winston, New York (1957).

René Vernon writes:

"In this busy table the author appears to show three of each of groups I to VII (e.g group I; group IA; group IB) and one group VIII, and one group 0, for a total of 23 groups and subgroups."

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Year:  1957 PT id = 1410, Type = review

Mazurs: Types of graphic representation of the periodic system of chemical elements

Types of graphic representation of the periodic system of chemical elements is a 1957 self-published book by Edward G. Mazurs. The book was updated, and re-titled, to the much better known Graphic Representations of the Periodic System During One Hundred Years (University of Alabama Press) in 1974.

Wikipedia says this:

Edward G. Mazurs (1894–1983) was a chemist who wrote a history of the periodic system of the chemical elements which is still considered a "classic book on the history of the periodic table". Originally self-published as Types of graphic representation of the periodic system of chemical elements (1957), it was reviewed by the ACS in 1958 as "the most complete survey of the range of human imagination in representing graphically the Mendeleev periodic law."

Mark Leach writes:

Unfortunately, Mazurs re-draws all of the periodic tables in both his books; he adds elements that were not known at the time of formulation and sometimes takes great liberties by rotating images by 90° (without comment), including Mendeleev's formulations of 1869. His classification system is confusing. As Wikipedia says: "Mazurs's books are difficult to use because the references are divided into 146 corresponding sections, and the index refers to the types and not to pages. Nevertheless, his references are the most comprehensive and accurate ever compiled for the period covered. He cited authors writing in at least 24 languages and from fifty countries."

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What is the Periodic Table Showing? Periodicity

© Mark R. Leach Ph.D. 1999 –


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