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Martin, Paul

Edwin M Kaiser William G Kenyon R A Klein C Konig A Paul Krapcho Stephen J Kuhn William C Kuryla Peter A Leermakers Robert L Letsinger Guy S Lougheed B J Magerlein R J L Martin John G Moefatt D Nasipuri George A Olah D E Pearson R J Petersen G Ploss J Posner A Rieche... [Pg.147]

Paul Strathern, Mendeleyev s Dream Ihe Quest for the Elements. New York St. Martins Press, 2001, p. 286. [Pg.116]

Mahurin, Paul A. Jerabek, J. Arturo Silva, J. Janet L. Tekell, Charles C. Martin, Jack L. Lancaster and Peter T. Fox, Reciprocal Limbic-Cortical Function and Negative Mood Converging Pet Findings in Depression and Normal Sadness , American Journal of Psychiatry 156 (1999) 675-82... [Pg.210]

Hummer, John J., John M. Googin, Ph.D, Michael W. Knazovich, Paul R. Wasilko, and Janice West, 1992. "Report of Investigation of Accidental Release of Hydrogen Fluoride from the Y-12 Plant Oak Ridge, Tennessee, January 24, 1992," Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc., Oak Ridge, TN, March 1992. [Pg.91]

Gary P. Curtis, Martin Reinhard, and Paul V. Roberts... [Pg.191]

Montpied P, Martin BM, Cottingham SL, Stubblefield BK, Ginns El, Paul SM. 1988. Regional distribution of the GABA /benzodiazepine receptor (a subunit) mRNA in rat brain. J Neurochem 51 1651-1654. [Pg.291]

Marcel J. J. Blommers ([S) Andre Strauss Martin Geiser Paul Ramage Helmut Sparrer Wolfgang Jahnke... [Pg.1]

Tellurium - the atomic number is 52 and the chemical symbol is Te. The name derives from the Latin Tellus, who was the Roman goddess of the earth . It was discovered by the Roumanian mine director Franz Joseph Muller von Reichenstein in 1782 and overlooked for sixteen years imtil it was first isolated by German chemist Martin-Heiniich Klaproth in 1798. The Hungarian chemist Paul Kitaibel independently discovered tellurium in 1789, prior to Klaproth s work but after von Reichenstein. [Pg.20]

A. Daniel Boese, Jan M. L. Martin, Frank De Proft, and Paul Geerlings ... [Pg.183]

This picture changed in the 1886 when an American chemist, Charles Martin Hall (1863— 1914), and a French chemist, Paul Louis-Toussaint Heroult (1863—1914), both discovered, at about the same time, a new process for extracting aluminum from molten aluminum oxide by electrolysis. (It might be noted that both discoverers have the same birth and death dates as well as the same date of discovery.) Hall was inspired by his teacher to find a way to inexpensively produce aluminum metal. He wired together numerous wet cells to form a battery that produced enough electricity to separate the aluminum from the melted aluminum oxide (mixed with the minerals cryolyte or fluorite), by the process known as electrolysis. Hall formed the Pittsburgh Reduction Co., which is now known as the Aluminum Company of America, or Alcoa. His company produced so much aluminum that the price dropped to about sixty cents per kilogram. [Pg.180]

Hoffman, Allan S., 236,245,255 Iliopoulos, Bias, 72 Leblond, Jacques, 211 Magestro, Paul, 152 Miller, Wilmer G., 152 Moller, Martin, 87... [Pg.283]

Strathern, Paul. Mendeleyev s Dream. New York St. Martin s Press, 2001. This is a very readable account of the history of chemistry that contains a great deal of narrative about the chemists lives. Don t be misled by the title. The chapter on Mendeleev begins on page 264 of this 292-page book. [Pg.264]

S., Martin, K., DiSorbo, O., Sieber, S., Bennett, L., Tennant, R., Stoll, R., Barrett, J.C., Blanchard, K., Paules, R.S. and Afshari, C.A. (2002) Gene expression analysis reveals chemical specific profiles. Toxicological Sciences, 67, 219-231. [Pg.469]

Paul A. K., Martin D. A., and Robert D. P. (1990) Linearization of baculovirus DNA enhances the recovery of recombinant virus expression vectors. Nucleic Acids Kes. 18, 5667-5672. [Pg.119]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.230 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.122 ]




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