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Ponderables: 100 Discoveries that Changed History, Who Did What When

Elements. Storia illustrata della Tavola Periodica

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Storia illustrata della tavola periodica partendo dalla preistoria (primo secolo A.C.), passando da medioevo, illuminismo e 19esimo secolo, fino ad arrivare all'età moderna.

192 pages, Paperback

First published October 9, 2012

14 people are currently reading
123 people want to read

About the author

Tom Jackson

654 books58 followers
"I'm a non-fiction author and project editor (plus I do a bit of journalism). I'm available for project development, writing, project management and I also work as a packager. Click on the links above to see examples of my work.

But first some background: Over the last 20 years, I've written books, magazine and newspaper articles, for online and for television. I get to write about a wide range of subjects, everything from axolotls to zoroastrianism. However, my specialties are natural history, technology and all things scientific. I've worked on projects with Brian May, Patrick Moore, Marcus de Sautoy and Carol Vorderman and for major international publishers, such as Dorling Kindersley, National Geographic, Scholastic, Hachette, Facts on File and BBC Magazines.

I spend my days finding fun ways of communicating all kinds of facts, new and old, to every age group and reading ability. I live in Bristol, England, with my wife and three children. I studied zoology at Bristol University and have had spells working at the zoos in Jersey and Surrey. I used to be something of a conservationist, which included planting trees in Somerset, surveying Vietnamese jungle and rescuing buffaloes from drought-ridden Zimbabwe. Writing jobs have also taken me to the Galápagos Islands, the Amazon rainforest, the coral reefs of Indonesia and the Sahara Desert. Nowadays, I can be found mainly in the attic."
~http://tomjackson.weebly.com/

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5 stars
21 (34%)
4 stars
23 (37%)
3 stars
13 (21%)
2 stars
4 (6%)
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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
Profile Image for Breana Sprinkle.
160 reviews7 followers
October 11, 2021
This book was an interesting read for anyone getting into the chemistry field and for anyone not getting into the field. It is my belief that knowledge is the strongest thing we have and that it should be used to benefithis would be used to benefit the society. I've been having an interesting time reading this novel and though it has taken quite a while I don't mind. I'm a slow reader and I'm and I am working to get much faster at my reading but this is one of those books where you want to absorb every ounce of the knowledge. The types of books where you need to reread it If you don't have a photographic memory and forget every few things like me.

Because of how it interested me did me and was described in such a wonderful way, it is definitely a 5 star read. So glad that I picked this one up from the Barnes & Noble at the beginning of this year.
Profile Image for Doc Kinne.
238 reviews7 followers
February 23, 2022
On the whole a pretty good book, especially given the breadth that it took for itself subject-wise.

Originally I expected that this was going to be an annotated history of the elements. "This? This is Hydrogen. It was recognized in the year..." "This? This is Helium. Originally it was discovered on the Sun before it was discovered on Earth..." That sort of thing.

It turned out to be a comprehensive history of chemistry, all the way from pre-pre-pre history to our present time. This would probably be an exceptional book in every High School Library.
Profile Image for Alicia.
8,646 reviews153 followers
January 8, 2025
I'm a big fan of this illustrated history series and have purchased many for our HS library. They're awesome to give context, build vocabulary, and give snippets of information to provide a well-rounded picture of a topic as is the case with this one on the periodic elements.

I always like when topics intersect too as I took a picture of a textbox featuring connections to Greek gods/goddesses for my son who loves that stuff.
Profile Image for Will Boncher.
627 reviews13 followers
January 31, 2019
Nothing new to me, but some okay stuff in there. 3 things that bugged me:

1) Agua regia is 3 parts hydrochloric acid, 1 part nitric acid. Hydrochloric, not sulfuric as the book gets wrong.

2) The bomb dropped on Nagasaki was Fat Man, not Fat Boy. (Maybe he was thinking of Little Boy.)

3) Ensure is the word he was looking forward whenever he said insure.
Profile Image for Heidi.
915 reviews
November 7, 2024
An excellent and thorough read about everything chemistry and periodic table related. Reading this aloud to my middle son as part of his science curriculum was an enjoyable experience. Ponderables is a wonderful series and I'm certain we'll read more of them in the next couple of years.
27 reviews
September 10, 2017
Tom Jackson is probably my favorite science history writer, and the level is for middle school.
Profile Image for Aharon.
637 reviews23 followers
March 29, 2018
Fast-paced, but no likeable characters.
32 reviews
January 31, 2022
I liked this book it was very fun because I like science and math.
Profile Image for James.
169 reviews
March 13, 2023
I enjoyed this book about the history of the periodic table and great scientific discoveries.
Profile Image for Mario Streger.
173 reviews3 followers
July 11, 2015
The book brings 100 milestones in chemistry and an interesting timeline.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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