Elements of Chemistry; In a New Systematic Order, Containing all the Modern Discoveries
- 1806
Rights
Public DomainDownload all 17 images
PDFZIPof full-sized JPGsDownload selected image
Small JPG1200 x 1667px — 250 KBLarge JPG2880 x 4001px — 1.2 MBFull-sized JPG3935 x 5467px — 2.1 MBOriginal fileTIFF — 3935 x 5467px — 61.6 MBThe first American reprint of the two-volume Elements of Chemistry Edinburgh (1802) edition. This work is the third appearance of the English translation by Scottish translator Robert Kerr (1755–1813) in America. It was preceded by two issues of the fourth English translation (Edinburgh, 1799), published in Philadelphia (1799) and New York (1801).
The volume's appendix includes the first English translation of a paper by Jean Henri Hassenfratz (1755-1827) and Pierre-Auguste Adet (1763-1834), New System of Chemical Characters, adapted to the New Nomenclature, by Messrs Hassenfratz and Adet: with some Alterations by the Translator. Bound after the first thirteen plates, plate XIV illustrates the chemical symbols created by Hassenfratz and Adet. Digitized content includes the work's appendix and plate XIV.
Property | Value |
---|---|
Author | |
Contributor | |
Publisher | |
Place of publication | |
Format | |
Genre | |
Extent |
|
Language | |
Subject | |
Rights | Public Domain Mark 1.0 |
Credit line |
|
Institutional location
Department | |
---|---|
Collection | |
Physical container |
|
Learn More
Related Items
Cite as
Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent. Elements of Chemistry; In a New Systematic Order, Containing All the Modern Discoveries. New York, New York: Duyckinck, Evert A. (Evert Augustus), 1806. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/aso1ecq.
This citation is automatically generated and may contain errors.
Rights
Public DomainDownload all 17 images
Searchable PDFmay contain errorsZIPof full-sized JPGsDownload selected image
-
Keyboard Shortcuts
Previous image shift + or , Next image shift + or . Pan image Zoom in + or shift + Zoom out - or shift + Zoom to fit 0 Close viewer esc Also
Mouse click to zoom in; shift-click to zoom out. Drag to pan. Pinch to zoom on touch.