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  2. Robert Boyle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Boyle

    Robert Boyle FRS [2] (/ b ɔɪ l /; 25 January 1627 – 31 December 1691) was an Anglo-Irish [3] natural philosopher, chemist, physicist, alchemist and inventor. Boyle is largely regarded today as the first modern chemist, and therefore one of the founders of modern chemistry, and one of the pioneers of modern experimental scientific method.

  3. Jean-Baptiste Boussingault - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Baptiste_Boussingault

    He collaborated with Jean Baptiste Dumas in writing an Essai de statique chimique des litres organists (1841), and was the author of Traite d'economie rurale (1844), which was remodelled as Agronomie, chimie agricole, et physiologie (5 vols., 1860–1874; 2nd ed., 1884), and of Etudes sur la transformation du fer en acier (1875).

  4. The Sceptical Chymist - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sceptical_Chymist

    The Sceptical Chymist: or Chymico-Physical Doubts & Paradoxes is the title of a book by Robert Boyle, published in London in 1661. In the form of a dialogue, the Sceptical Chymist presented Boyle's hypothesis that matter consisted of corpuscles and clusters of corpuscles in motion and that every phenomenon was the result of collisions of particles in motion.

  5. Alexander Borodin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Borodin

    Music remained a secondary vocation for Borodin besides his main career as a chemist and physician. He suffered poor health, having overcome cholera and several minor heart failures. He died suddenly during a ball [12] [13] at the academy, and was interred in Tikhvin Cemetery at the Alexander Nevsky Monastery in Saint Petersburg. [14]

  6. ROT13 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROT13

    ROT13 and ROT5 can be used together in the same message, sometimes called ROT18 (18 = 13 + 5) or ROT13.5. ROT47 is a derivative of ROT13 which, in addition to scrambling the basic letters, treats numbers and common symbols.

  7. Carl Wilhelm Scheele - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Wilhelm_Scheele

    Carl Wilhelm Scheele (German:, Swedish: [ˈɧêːlɛ]; 9 December 1742 – 21 May 1786 [2]) was a German Swedish [3] pharmaceutical chemist.. Scheele discovered oxygen (although Joseph Priestley published his findings first), and identified molybdenum, tungsten, barium, nitrogen, and chlorine, among others.

  8. Of Love and Other Demons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Of_Love_and_Other_Demons

    Of Love and Other Demons (Spanish: Del amor y otros demonios) is a novel by Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez published in 1994. Set in 18th-century Colombia, the plot follows a 12-year-old girl, bitten by a rabid dog; she is believed to be possessed by demons, and is sent to a convent to be exorcised; the priest who is meant to exorcise her falls in love with her.

  9. Smithson Tennant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smithson_Tennant

    Smithson Tennant FRS (30 November 1761 [1] – 22 February 1815 [2]) was an English chemist. He is best known for his discovery of the elements iridium and osmium, which he found in the residues from the solution of platinum ores in 1803. He also contributed to the proof of the identity of diamond and charcoal. The mineral tennantite is named ...