Eric R. Scerri looks at the trends in properties of elements that led to the construction of the table, and shows how the deeper meaning of the table's structure gradually became apparent with the development of atomic theory and, in particular, quantum mechanics, which underlies the behavior of all of the elements and their compounds.
The Ghetto
Bryan Cheyette
audiobookYale Classics (Vol. 2) : The Rise and Fall of Rome: The Greatest Works of the Roman Classical Literature
Lucius Annaeus Seneca, Julius Caesar, Boethius, Horace, Plutarch, Apuleius, Virgil, Persius, Terence, Ammianus Marcellinus, Sallust, Juvenal, Lucan, Suetonius, Tibullus, Tacitus, Petronius, Cornelius Nepos, Lucretius, Martial, Catullus, Cicero, Claudian, Pliny the Younger, Saint Augustine of Hippo, Plautus, Ennius, Propertius, The Metamorphoses, Augustus, Quintilian
bookReligion
Thomas A. Tweed
audiobookThe Renaissance
Jerry Brotton
audiobookMatter
Geoff Cottrell
audiobookThe Brain
Michael O’Shea
audiobookConcentration Camps
Dan Stone
audiobookThe Abrahamic Religions
Charles L. Cohen
audiobookSexual Selection
Marlene Zuk, Leigh W. Simmons
audiobookBiochemistry
Mark Lorch
audiobookThe Roman Empire
Christopher Kelly
audiobookAbsolute Monarchs
John Julius Norwich
audiobook