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" Without offering any hypothesis regarding the cause of this symmetrical grouping of atoms, it is sufficiently evident, from the examples just given, that such a tendency or law prevails, and that, no matter what the character of the uniting atoms may... "
A Short History of the Progress of Scientific Chemistry in Our Own Times - Page 141
by Sir William Augustus Tilden - 1899 - 276 pages
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Journal of the Chemical Society, Volume 73

Chemical Society (Great Britain) - 1898 - 1116 pages
...sufficiently evident, from the examples just given, that such a tendency or law prevails, and that, no matter what the character of the uniting atoms may be, the continuing power of the attracting element, if I may beallowcd the term, is always satisfied by the...
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Nature, Volume 17

1878 - 770 pages
...sufficiently evident, from the examples just given, that such a tendency or law prevails, and that, no matter what the character of the uniting atoms...attracting element, if I may be allowed the term, it always satisfied by the same number of these atoms." He then proceeds to illustrate this law by...
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American Journal of Mathematics, Volume 1

1878 - 446 pages
...sufficiently evident, from the examples just given, that such a tendency or law prevails, and that, no matter what the character of the uniting atoms may be, the combining j)ower of the attracting element, if I may be allowed the term, is always satisfied by the same number...
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Nature, Volume 25

Sir Norman Lockyer - 1882 - 780 pages
...of the nature of the elements with which it combined ; in the words of a very distinguished chemist, "No matter what the character of the uniting atoms may be, the combing power of the attracting element is always satisfied by the same number of these atoms." This...
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Nature, Volume 25

Sir Norman Lockyer - 1882 - 670 pages
...the nature of the elements with which it combined ; in the words of a very distinguished chemist, " No matter what the character of the uniting atoms may be, the combing power of the attracting element is always satisfied by the same number of these atoms." This...
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A Treatise on the Principles of Chemistry

Matthew Moncrieff Pattison Muir - 1884 - 528 pages
...Frankland's paper already referred to [Pltil. Trans. 142. 417-] this definition is apparently adopted, 'no matter what the character of the uniting atoms...be, the combining power of the attracting element is always satisf1ed by the same number of these atoms' (p. 440). atoms of H, F, Cl, Br, I, or Tl) with...
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The Rise and Development of Organic Chemistry

Carl Schorlemmer - 1894 - 370 pages
...Meyer's Modern Theories, translated by Bedson ami Williams, p. 194. II Ann. Chem. Pharm. 104, 129. the uniting atoms may be, the combining power of the...the term, is always satisfied by the same number of atoms. It was probably a glimpse of an operation of this law amongst the more complex organic groups...
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The Rise and Development of Organic Chemistry

Carl Schorlemmer - 1894 - 318 pages
...Meyer's Modern Theories, translated by Bedson and Williams, p. 194. * Ann. Ghem. Pharm. 104, 129. tlw uniting atoms may be, the combining power of the attracting...the term, is always satisfied by the same number of atoms. It was probably a glimpse of an operation of this law amongst the more complex organic groups...
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A History of Chemistry from Earliest Times to the Present Day: Being Also an ...

Ernst von Meyer - 1898 - 664 pages
...prevails, and that, no matter what the character of the uniting atoms may l1e, the combining pmver of the attracting element, if I may be allowed the...always satisfied by the same number of these atoms." In this way was established the doctrine that a varying, but at the same time, within certain limits,...
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Lectures on the History of the Development of Chemistry Since the Time of ...

Albert Ladenburg - 1900 - 520 pages
...sufficiently evident, from the examples just given, that such a tendency or law prevails, and that, no matter what the character of the uniting atoms...always satisfied by the same number of these atoms. It was probably Phil. Trans. '«" ""• Annalen. 85. 329. a glimpse of the operation of this law amongst...
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