So, yeah. Chemist and IYC.
Meaning I had to read Hugh Aldersey-Williams's Periodic Tales: A Cultural History of the Elements, From Arsenic to Zinc almost as soon as it appeared on bookshelves.
It was a bit of a follow-up to my reading of Sam Kean's The Disappearing Spoon but less humorous. This is a very well-researched look into how the discovery of the elements impacted the lives of everyday people:
Hunger for gold as a valuable commodity (Pliny disapproves).
The yellow lamplight of dystopian fiction derives from sodium.
Mercury was praised as a cure-all then turned into a poison.
The development of the Haber-Bosch process by Fritz Haber - the process of nitrogen fixation to produce fertilizer - was a side project in his development of chlorine and other gases which changed the face of warfare in World War I (and led to Wilfrid Owen's poem The Old Lie).
It's best to treat this book as a series of essays linked into "chapters" by similar themes rather than a cohesive book of history.
Drawback - what pictures included are in the book are small and black-and-white. Bo
Showing posts with label IYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IYC. Show all posts
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
Welcome to Reading Chemistry!
Reading Chemistry is the brainchild resulting from the metaphorical intersection of Conclave, a book, and the UN. While I was at Alpha Chi Sigma's biennial Conclave, I attended a forum to brainstorm ideas for the International Year of Chemistry (IYC). I was also reading Sam Kean's The Disappearing Spoon. When I got home from Conclave, I finished The Disappearing Spoon and then ordered three more chemistry-related books.
Then it hit me - I could start a blog so people could post about chemistry books of all types. Scientific, popular science, history, biography, fiction. All different types. And I could get it up and running by 2011.
Genius!
Then it hit me - I could start a blog so people could post about chemistry books of all types. Scientific, popular science, history, biography, fiction. All different types. And I could get it up and running by 2011.
Genius!
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