Chemistry:Sequanium
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Sequanium was the proposed name for a new element that Romanian physicist Horia Hulubei reported he had discovered in 1939.[1][2] The name derived from the Latin word Sequana for the river Seine running through Paris where Hulubei worked at that time. Hulubei thought he had discovered element 93 in a tantalite sample from the French region Haute-Vienne. Element 93 was synthesised in 1940 and named neptunium.[3] It does in fact occur in nature in trace amounts, but it is not commonly believed that Hulubei actually discovered it.
References
- ↑ Fontani, Marco (6–10 September 2005). "The Twilight of the Naturally-Occurring Elements: Moldavium (Ml), Sequanium (Sq) and Dor (Do)" (DOC). Fifth International Conference on the History of Chemistry. Lisbon. http://5ichc-portugal.ulusofona.pt/uploads/PaperLong-MarcoFontani.doc.
- ↑ Hulubei, H.; Cauchois, Y. (1939). "Nouvelles recherches sur l'élément 93 naturel". Comptes rendus 209: 476–479. http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k3161s.image.f478.langFR.
- ↑ Mcmillan, Edwin; Abelson, Philip (1940). "Radioactive Element 93". Physical Review 57 (12): 1185. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.57.1185.2. Bibcode: 1940PhRv...57.1185M.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequanium.
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