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All the elements arranged by the country that discovered them

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Another day, another awesome take on the Periodic Table of Elements. In this one, science communicator and PhD student Jamie Gallagher mapped out where the scientists were living when they made their discoveries.

Speaking to Smart News, Gallagher talks about one of his favorite tales of elemental discovery:

One of my favourites has to be polonium, though, the first element to be discovered by Marie and Pierre Curie. They were working in a modified shed with substances so dangerously radioactive their notes are still too active to be handled safely.

Working together they isolated this element and later named it Polonium after Marie’s home country. (A country, I may add, that turned her away from her pursuit of education as she was a politically interested female). It was her hope that by naming the element after Poland she could generate interested in the independence (from Germany) campaign for the country. Yet [in my periodic table] the victory comes in under the French flag where the work was carried out.

It remains to this day the only element to be named after a political cause, and a wonderful tribute to a phenomenal woman.

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Other recent periodic table takes: Muppets and Lord of the Rings. Also this.

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[Via Smithsonian's Smart News]