Mary Elvira Weeks
#74,810
Most Influential Person Across History
Chemist and science historian
Mary Elvira Weeks's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
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Chemistry
Mary Elvira Weeks's Degrees
- PhD Chemistry University of Kansas
- Bachelors Chemistry University of Kansas
Why Is Mary Elvira Weeks Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Mary Elvira Weeks was an American chemist and historian of science. Weeks was the first woman to receive a Ph.D. in chemistry at the University of Kansas and the first woman to be a faculty member there.
Mary Elvira Weeks's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- The discovery of the elements (1968) (205)
- The discovery of the elements. XVI. The rare earth elements (1932) (20)
- The discovery of the elements. XXI. Supplementary note on the discovery of phosphorus (1933) (15)
- The discovery of the elements. II. Elements known to the alchemists (1932) (15)
- A history of the American Chemical Society : seventy-five eventful years (1952) (15)
- The discovery of the elements. VI. Tellurium and selenium (1932) (14)
- The discovery of the elements. XVII. The halogen family (1932) (11)
- The discovery of the elements. VII. Columbium, tantalum, and vanadium (1932) (11)
- Daniel Rutherford and the discovery of nitrogen (1934) (10)
- The discovery of the elements. IV. Three important gases (1932) (9)
- The discovery of the elements. VIII. The platinum metals (1932) (8)
- The discovery of the elements. Chronology (1933) (8)
- The discovery of the elements. XIII. Some spectroscopic discoveries (1932) (8)
- The discovery of the elements. III. Some eighteenth-century metals (1932) (7)
- The discovery of the elements. XII. Other elements isolated with the aid of potassium and sodium: Beryllium, boron, silicon, and aluminum (1932) (7)
- J. A. Arfwedson and his services to chemistry (1937) (6)
- The discovery of the elements. XIX. The radioactive elements (1933) (5)
- THE EFFECT OF VARIOUS SUBSTANCES ON THE PHOTOCHEMICAL OXIDATION OF SOLUTIONS OF SODIUM SULFITE. (1917) (4)
- The discovery of the elements. IX. Three alkali metals: Potassium, sodium, and lithium (1932) (4)
- The discovery of the elements. XIII. Supplementary note on the discovery of thallium (1932) (3)
- The discovery of the elements. XVIII. The inert gases (1932) (3)
- The discovery of the elements. XV. Some elements predicted by Mendeleeff (1932) (3)
- The discovery of tellurium (1935) (3)
- The scientific contributions of the de Elhuyar brothers (1934) (2)
- Bi-ortho-anisidine as internal indicator in bichromate method for iron (1932) (2)
- The discovery of the elements. I. Elements known to the ancient world (1932) (2)
- The chemical contributions of Charles Hatchett (1938) (2)
- The discovery of the elements. XIV. The periodic system of the elements (1932) (2)
- The Rôle of Hydrogen Ion Concentration in the Precipitation of Calcium and Magnesium Carbonates (2)
- The scientific contributions of Don Andres Manuel del Rio (1935) (2)
- The discovery of the elements. XI. Some elements isolated with the aid of potassium and sodium: Zirconium, titanium, cerium, and thorium (1932) (2)
- The discovery of the elements. XX. Recently discovered elements (1933) (2)
- The discovery of the elements. V. Chromium, molybdenum, tungsten and uranium (1932) (2)
- Paracelsus and he discovery of hydrogen (1932) (1)
- The author of (1)
- M.-E. Chevreul. The fiftieth anniversary of his death (1940) (1)
- Victoria Blue BX as Internal Indicator in Ceriometry (1934) (1)
- Book Review:Antoine Lavoisier. The Father of Modern Chemistry Douglas McKie (1936) (1)
- Mrs. A. H. Lincoln Phelps and her services to chemical education (1937) (1)
- The chemical contributions of William Allen (1958) (1)
- The discovery of the elements. Foreword (1932) (1)
- An exhibit of chemical substances mentioned in the Bible (1943) (1)
- Nils Gabriel Sefström--The Sesquicentennial of His Birth (1938) (1)
- A Hundred Years of Chemistry. Alexander Findlay (1938) (1)
- Torbern Bergman: A bibliography of his works (Mostrom, Birgitta) (1957) (0)
- Discovery of the elements / Mary Elvira Weeks (1956) (0)
- Lehrbuch der Chemie fur hohere Lehranstalten (Textbook of Chemistry for Secondary Schools). Part 1. Fifth revised edition (Winderlich, Rudolf) (1936) (0)
- Torbern Bergman as pioneer in the domain of mineral waters (Boklund, Uno) (1957) (0)
- P-Phenetidine and P-Anisidine as Oxidation Indicators (1931) (0)
- Lehrbuch der Chemie fur hohere Lehranstalten. (Textbook of Chemistry for Secondary Schools). Part 2. Advanced Course. Third revised edition (Winderlich, Rudolf) (1936) (0)
- The discovery of the elements. III. A correction (1932) (0)
- The discovery of the elements. Vanadium (the author replies) (1932) (0)
- The Life of Ira Remsen (Getman, Frederick H.) (1940) (0)
- The author of "The chemical analysis of bismuth" (1934) (0)
- The discovery of the elements. X. The alkaline earth metals and magnesium and cadmium (1932) (0)
- Daniel Rutherford and the discovery of nitrogen. Correction (1934) (0)
- The discovery of the elements. XX. Corrections (1933) (0)
- Thomas Jefferson and the Scientific Trends of His Time (Browne, Charles A.) (1945) (0)
- Some scientific friends of Sir Walter Scott (1936) (0)
- Don José Celestino Mutis, 1732-1808 (1944) (0)
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