by John Carey
From that time to the present the population of the world has undergone slow and gradual, but incessant, changes. There has been no grand catastrophe – no destroyer has swept away the forms of life of one period, and replaced them by a totally new creation: but one species has vanished and another has taken its place; creatures of one type of structure have diminished, those of another have increased as time has passed on. And thus, while the differences between the living creatures of the time before the chalk and those of the present day appear startling, if placed side by side, we are led from one to the other by the most gradual progress, if we follow the course of Nature through the whole series of those relics of her operations which she has left behind. It is by the population of the chalk sea that the ancient and modern inhabitants of the world are most completely connected. The groups which are dying out flourish side by side with the groups which are now the dominant forms of life. Thus the chalk contains remains of those strange flying and swimming reptiles, the pterodactyl, the ichthyosaurus, and the plesiosaurus, which are found in no later deposits, but abounded in preceding ages. The chambered cells called ammonites and belemnites, which are so characteristic of the period preceding the cretaceous, in like manner die with it.
But amongst these fading remainders of a previous state of things, are some very modern forms of life, looking like Yankee pedlars among a tribe of Red Indians. Crocodiles of modern type appear; bony fishes, many of them very similar to existing species, almost supplant the forms of fish which predominate in more ancient seas; and many kinds of living shell-fish first become known to us in the chalk …
There is not a shadow of a reason for believing that the physical changes of the globe, in past times, have been effected by other than natural causes. Is there any more reason for believing that the concomitant modifications in the forms of the living inhabitants of the globe have been brought about in other ways? … Science gives no countenance to such a wild fancy; nor can even the perverse ingenuity of a commentator pretend to discover this sense in the simple words in which the writer of Genesis records the proceedings of the fifth and sixth days of the Creation.
A small beginning has led us to a great ending. If I were to put the bit of chalk with which we started into the hot but obscure flame of burning hydrogen, it would presently shine like the sun. It seems to me that this physical metamorphosis is no false image of what has been the result of our subjecting it to a jet of fervent, though no-wise brilliant, thought tonight. It has become luminous, and its clear rays, penetrating the abyss of the remote past, have brought within our ken some stages of the evolution of the earth. And in the shifting ‘without haste, but without rest’ of the land and sea, as in the endless variation of the forms assumed by living beings, we have observed nothing but the natural product of the forces originally possessed by the substance of the universe.
Source: T. H. Huxley, Collected Essays, London, Macmillan & Co., 1894–1908.
Siberia Breeds a Prophet
In 1869 the Russian chemist Dmitri Ivanovitch Mendeléeff – or Mendeleyev – (1834–1907) began a new chapter in the history of chemistry by devising a periodic table of the elements according to their relative atomic weights. Making the periodic table dull for non-specialist readers is very easy, and many would-be popular science writers have done it. Making it as absorbing as Bernard Jaffe does takes a great deal of knowledge and imagination. Jaffe’s book Crucibles, from which this extract comes, was originally published in America in 1930, and appropriately won the Francis Bacon Award for the Humanizing of Knowledge. Since then it has been through many reprintings and four updated editions.
Out of Russia came the patriarchal voice of a prophet of chemistry. ‘There is an element as yet undiscovered. I have named it eka-aluminium. By properties similar to those of the metal aluminium you shall identify it. Seek it, and it will be found.’ Startling as was this prophecy, the sage of Russia was not through. He predicted another element resembling the element boron. He was even bold enough to state its atomic weight. And before that voice was stilled, it foretold the discovery of a third element whose physical and chemical properties were thoroughly described. No man, not even the Russian himself, had beheld these unknown substances.
This was the year 1869. The age of miracles was long past. Yet here was a distinguished scientist, holding a chair of chemistry at a famous university, covering himself with the mantle of the prophets of old. Had he gathered this information from inside the crystal glass of some sorcerer? Perhaps, like the seer of ancient times, he had gone to the top of a mountain to bring down the tablets of these new elements. But this oracle disdained the robes of a priest. Rather did he announce his predictions from the stillness of his chemical laboratory, where midst the smoke, not of a burning bush, but of the fire of his furnace, he had seen visions of a great generalization in chemistry.
Chemistry had already been the object of prophecy. When Lavoisier heated some tin in a sealed flask and found it to change in appearance and weight, he saw clearly a new truth, and foretold other changes. Lockyer a year before had looked through a new instrument – the spectroscope devised by Bunsen and Kirchhof. Through this spectroscope he had gazed at the bright colored lines of a new element ninety-three million miles away. Since it was present in the photosphere of the sun he called it helium and predicted its existence on our earth. Twenty-one years later, William Hillebrand of the United States Geological Survey, came across this gas in the rare mineral cleveite.
But the predictions of the Russian were more astounding. He had made no direct experiments. He had come to his conclusions seemingly out of thin air. There had gradually been born in the fertile mind of this man the germ of a great truth. It was a fantastic seed but it germinated with surprising rapidity. When the flower was mature, he ventured to startle the world with its beauty.
In 1884 Sir William Ramsay had come to London to attend a dinner given in honor of William Perkin, the discoverer of the dye mauve.
I was very early at the dinner [Ramsay recalled] and was putting off time looking at the names of people to be present, when a peculiar foreigner, every hair of whose head acted in independence of every other, came up bowing. I said, ‘We are to have a good attendance, I think?’ He said, ‘I do not spik English.’ I said, ‘Vielleicht sprechen Sie Deutsch?’ He replied, ‘Ja ein wenig. Ich bin Mendeléeff.’ Well, we had twenty minutes or so before anyone else turned up and we talked our mutual subject fairly out. He is a nice sort of fellow but his German is not perfect. He said he was raised in East Siberia and knew no Russian until he was seventeen years old. I suppose he is a Kalmuck or one of those outlandish creatures.
This ‘outlandish creature’ was Mendeléeff, the Russian prophet to whom the world listened. Men went in search of the missing elements he described. In the bowels of the earth, in the flue dust of factories, in the waters of the oceans, and in every conceivable corner they hunted. Summers and winters rolled by while Mendeléeff kept preaching the truth of his visions. Then, in 1875, the first of the new elements he foretold was discovered. In a zinc ore mined in the Pyrenees, Lecoq de Boisbaudran came upon the hidden eka-aluminium. This Frenchman analyzed and reanalyzed the mineral and studied the new element in every possible way to make sure there was no error. Mendeléeff must indeed be a prophet! For here was a metal exactly similar to his eka-aluminium. It yielded its secret of two new lines to the spectroscope, it was easily fusible, it could form alums, its chloride was volatile. Every one of these characteristics had been accurately foretold by the Russian. Lecoq named it gallium after the ancient name of his native country.
But there were many who disbelieved. ‘This is one of those strange guesses which by the law of averages must come true,’ they argued. Silly to believe that new elements could be predicted with such accuracy! One might as well predict the birth of a new star in the heavens. Has not Lavoisier, the father of chemistry, declared that ‘all that can be said upon the nature and number of the elements is confined to dis
cussions entirely of a metaphysical nature? The subject only furnishes us with indefinite problems.’
But then came the news that Winkler, in Germany, had stumbled over another new element, which matched the eka-silicon of Mendeléeff. The German had followed the clue of the Russian. He was looking for a dirty gray element with an atomic weight of about 72, a density of 5.5, an element which was slightly acted upon by acids. From the silver ore, argyrodite, he isolated a grayish white substance with atomic weight of 72.3 and a density of 5.5. He heated it in air and found its oxide to be exactly as heavy as had been predicted. He synthesized its ethide and found it to boil at exactly the temperature that Mendeléeff had prefigured. There was not a scintilla of doubt about the fulfilment of Mendeléeff’s second prophecy. The spectroscope added unequivocal testimony. Winkler announced the new element under the name of germanium in honor of his fatherland. The sceptics were dumbfounded. Perhaps after all the Russian was no charlatan!
Two years later the world was completely convinced. Out of Scandinavia came the report that Nilson had isolated eka-boron. Picking up the scent of the missing element in the ore of euxenite, Nilson had tracked it down until the naked element, exhibiting every property foreshadowed for it, lay before him in his evaporating dish. The data were conclusive. The whole world of science came knocking at the door of the Russian in St Petersburg.
Dmitri Ivanovitch Mendeléeff came of a family of heroic pioneers. More than a century before his birth, Peter the Great had started to westernize Russia. Upon a marsh of pestilence he reared a mighty city which was to be Russia’s window to the West. For three-quarters of a century Russia’s intellectual march eastward continued, until in 1787 in Tobolsk, Siberia, the grandfather of Dmitri opened up the first printing press, and with the spirit of a pioneer published the first newspaper in Siberia, the Irtysch. In this desolate spot, settled two centuries before by the Cossacks, Dmitri was born on February 7, 1834. He was the last of a family of seventeen children.
Misfortune overtook his family. His father, director of the local high school, became blind, and soon after died of consumption. His mother, Maria Korniloff, a Tartar beauty, unable to support her large family on a pension of five hundred dollars a year, reopened a glass factory which her family was the first to establish in Siberia. Tobolsk at this time was an administrative center to which Russian political exiles were taken. From one of these prisoners of the revolt of 1825, a ‘Decembrist’ who married his sister, Dimitri learned the rudiments of natural science. When fire destroyed the glass factory, little Dmitri, pet of his ageing mother – she was already fifty-seven – was taken to Moscow in the hope that he might be admitted to the University. Official red tape prevented this. Determined that her son should receive a good scientific education, his mother undertook to move to St Petersburg, where he finally gained admittance to the Science Department of the Pedagogical Institute, a school for the training of high school teachers. Here he specialized in mathematics, physics and chemistry. The classics were distasteful to this blue-eyed boy. Years later, when he took a hand in the solution of Russia’s educational problems, he wrote, ‘We could live at the present time without a Plato, but a double number of Newtons is required to discover the secrets of nature, and to bring life into harmony with its laws.’
Mendeléeff worked diligently at his studies and graduated at the head of his class. Never very robust during these early years, his health gradually weakened, and the news of his mother’s death completely unnerved him. He had come to her as she lay on her death bed. She spoke to him of his future: ‘Refrain from illusions, insist on work and not on words. Patiently search divine and scientific truth.’ Mendeléeff never forgot those words. Even as he dreamed, he always felt the solid earth beneath his feet.
His physician gave him six months to live. To regain his health, he was ordered to seek a warmer climate. He went to the south of Russia and obtained a position as science master at Simferopol in the Crimea. When the Crimean War broke out he left for Odessa, and at the age of twenty-two he was back in St Petersburg as a privat-docent. An appointment as privat-docent meant nothing more than permission to teach, and brought no stipend save a part of the fees paid by the students who attended the lectures. Within a few years he asked and was granted permission from the Minister of Public Instruction to study in France and Germany. There was no opportunity in Russia for advanced work in science. At Paris he worked in the laboratory of Henri Regnault and, for another year, at Heidelberg in a small private laboratory built out of his meager means. Here he met Bunsen and Kirchhof from whom he learned the use of the spectroscope, and together with Kopp attended the Congress of Karlsruhe, listening to the great battle over the molecules of Avogadro. Cannizarro’s atomic weights were to do valiant service for him in the years to come. Mendeléeff’s attendance at this historic meeting ended his Wanderjahre.
The next few years were very busy ones. He married, completed in sixty days a five-hundred-page textbook on organic chemistry which earned him the Domidoff Prize, and gained his doctorate in chemistry for a thesis on The Union of Alcohol with Water. The versatility of this gifted teacher, chemical philosopher and accurate experimenter was soon recognized by the University of St Petersburg, which appointed him full professor before he was thirty-two.
Then came the epoch-making year of 1869. Mendeléeff had spent twenty years reading, studying and experimenting with the chemical elements. All these years he had been busy collecting a mass of data from every conceivable source. He had arranged and rearranged this data in the hope of unfolding a secret. It was a painstaking task. Thousands of scientists had worked on the elements in hundreds of laboratories scattered over the civilized world. Sometimes he had to spend days searching for missing data to complete his tables. The number of the elements had increased since the ancient artisans fashioned instruments from their gold, silver, copper, iron, mercury, lead, tin, sulfur and carbon. The alchemists had added six new elements in their futile search for the seed of gold and the elixir of life. Basil Valentine, a German physician, in the year when Columbus was discovering America had rather fancifully described antimony. In 1530 Georgius Agricola, another German, talked about bismuth in his De Re Metallica, a book on mining which was translated into English for the first time by a (later) President of the United States, Herbert Hoover, and his wife in 1912. Paracelsus was the first to mention the metal zinc to the Western World. Brandt discovered glowing phosphorus in urine, and arsenic and cobalt were soon added to the list of the elements.
Before the end of the eighteenth century, fourteen more elements were discovered. In faraway Choco, Colombia, a Spanish naval officer, Don Antonio de Ulloa, had picked up a heavy nugget while on an astronomical mission, and had almost discarded it as worthless before the valuable properties of the metal platinum were recognized. This was in 1735. Then came lustrous nickel, inflammable hydrogen, inactive nitrogen, life-giving oxygen, death-dealing chlorine, manganese, used among other things for burglar-proof safes, tungsten, for incandescent lamps, chromium, for stainless steel, molybdenum and titanium, so useful in steel alloys, tellurium, zirconium, and uranium, heaviest of all the elements. The nineteenth century had hardly opened when Hatchett, an Englishman, discovered columbium (niobium) in a black mineral that had found its way from the Connecticut Valley to the British Museum. And thus the search went on, until in 1869 sixty-three different elements had been isolated and described in the chemical journals of England, France, Germany and Sweden.
Mendeléeff gathered together all the data on these sixty-three chemical elements. He did not miss a single one. He even included fluorine whose presence was known, but which had not yet been isolated because of its tremendous activity. Here was a list of all the chemical elements, every one of them consisting of different Daltonian atoms. Their atomic weights, ranging from 1 (hydrogen) to 238 (uranium), were all dissimilar. Some, like oxygen, hydrogen, chlorine and nitrogen, were gases. Others, like mercury and bromine, were liquids under normal conditions. The
rest were solids. There were some very hard metals like platinum and iridium, and soft metals like sodium and potassium. Lithium was a metal so light that it could float on water. Osmium, on the other hand, was twenty-two and a half times as heavy as water. Here was mercury, a metal which was not a solid at all, but a liquid. Copper was red, gold yellow, iodine steel gray, phosphorus white, and bromine red. Some metals, like nickel and chromium, could take a very high polish; others like lead and aluminium, were duller. Gold, on exposure to the air, never tarnished, iron rusted very easily, iodine sublimed and changed into a vapor. Some elements united with one atom of oxygen, others with two, three or four atoms. A few, like potassium and fluorine, were so active that it was dangerous to handle them with unprotected fingers. Others could remain unchanged for ages. What a maze of varying, dissimilar, physical characteristics and chemical properties!
Could some order be found in this body of diverse atoms? Was there any connection between these elements? Could some system of evolution or development be traced among them, such as Darwin, ten years before, had found among the multiform varieties of organic life? Mendeléeff wondered. The problem haunted his dreams. Constantly his mind reverted to this puzzling question.
Mendeléeff was a dreamer and a philosopher. He was going to find the key to this heterogeneous collection of data. Perhaps nature had a simple secret to unfold. And while he believed it to be ‘the glory of God to conceal a thing,’ he was firmly convinced that it was ‘the honor of kings to search it out.’ And what a boon it would prove to his students!
He arranged all the elements in the order of increasing atomic weights, starting with the lightest, hydrogen, and completing his table with uranium, the heaviest. He saw no particular value in arranging the elements in this way; it had been done previously. Unknown to Mendeléeff, an Englishman, John Newlands, had three years previously read, before the English Chemical Society at Burlington House, a paper on the arrangement of the elements. Newlands had noticed that each succeeding eighth element in his list showed properties similar to the first element. This seemed strange. He compared the table of the elements to the keyboard of a piano with its eighty-eight notes divided into periods or octaves of eight. ‘The members of the same group of elements,’ he said, ‘stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music’ The members of the learned society of London laughed at his Law of Octaves. Professor Foster ironically inquired if he had ever examined the elements according to their initial letters. No wonder – think of comparing the chemical elements to the keyboard of a piano! One might as well compare the sizzling of sodium as it skims over water to the music of the heavenly spheres. ‘Too fantastic,’ they agreed, and J. A. R. Newlands almost went down to oblivion.