Periodic Table |
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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).
Periodic Tables from the year 1955 :
| 1955 | Mazurs' Valence Periodic Table |
| 1955 | Mazurs' Periodic Table |
| 1955 | Krafft's Periodic Table (1955) |
| 1955 | Mazurs' 1955 Formulation |
| 1955 | Mendelevium, Discovery of |
| 1955 | Element Hunters |
| Year: 1955 | PT id = 300, Type = formulation |
Mazurs' Valence Periodic Table
In his 1974 book Graphic Representations of the Periodic System During One Hundred Years, University of Alabama Press (2nd edition) Edward G. Mazurs presents a valence periodic table. He classifies this as a Subtype IIIC3-6a formulation:

| Year: 1955 | PT id = 301, Type = formulation |
Mazurs' Valence Periodic Table
In his 1974 book Graphic Representations of the Periodic System During One Hundred Years, University of Alabama Press (2nd edition) Edward G. Mazurs presents a periodic table he classifies as a Subtype IIIC3-6b formulation:

| Year: 1955 | PT id = 579, Type = formulation |
Krafft's Periodic Table (1955)
From The Ether and Its Vortices, p. 63, Carl Frederick Krafft
Thanks to Edmond Maurice Peyroux for the tip!
| Year: 1955 | PT id = 691, Type = formulation |
Mazurs' 1955 Formulation
From Edward G. Mazurs' 1974 (2nd edition) Graphic Representations of the Periodic System During One Hundred Years, University of Alabama Press:

Thanks to Philip Stewart for the tip!
| Year: 1955 | PT id = 881, Type = element |
Discovery of Mendelevium
Md ![]()
Mendelevium, atomic number 101, has a mass of 258 au.
Synthetic radioactive element.
Mendelevium was first observed in 1955 by A. Ghiorso, G. Harvey, R. Choppin, S. G. Thompson and G. T. Seaborg.
| Year: 1955 | PT id = 1086, Type = element misc data |
Element Hunters
A YouTube video, The Element Hunters.
The text accompanying the video says:
"Scientist in Berkeley discover new elements [Californium & Einsteinium] from hydrogen bomb debris in 1951 and then use the 60 inch Cyclotron to create Mendelevium, element 101. The team included Nobel Prize winner Glenn Seaborg and famed element hunter, Albert Ghiorso."
Thanks to Roy Alexander for the tip!
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| What is the Periodic Table Showing? | Periodicity |
© Mark R. Leach Ph.D. 1999 –
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