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" It will also be seen that the numbers of analogous elements generally differ, either by 7 or by some multiple of 7 ; in other words, members of the same group stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music. "
The Clinique: A Monthly Abstract of the Clinics and of the Proceedings of ... - Page 340
1908
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On the Discovery of the Periodic Law: And on Relations Among the Atomic Weights

John A. R. Newlands - 1884 - 74 pages
...either by 7 or by some multiple of seven ; in other words, members of the same group stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music. Thus, in the nitrogen group, between nitrogen and phosphorus there are 7 elements ; between phosphorus...
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American Chemical Journal, Volume 6

Ira Remsen, Charles August Rouiller - 1885 - 466 pages
...differ by 7, or by some multiple of 7 ; in other words, members of the same group stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music." The numbers here mentioned are those designating the position of the elements in the table. Thus, hydrogen...
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A Short History of the Progress of Scientific Chemistry in Our Own Times

Sir William Augustus Tilden - 1899 - 296 pages
...either by 7 or by some multiple of 7 ; in other words, members of the same group stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music. This relationship Newlands proposed to call the " Law of Octaves." The following year the same chemist brought...
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The Periodic Classification and the Problem of Chemical Evolution

George Rudorf - 1900 - 254 pages
...differ by 7 or some multiple of 7. In other words, the members of the same group stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music." 2 Little notice was taken of Newlands' discovery at the time of its announcement, and, in fact, not...
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Principles of Inorganic Chemistry

Harry Clary Jones - 1903 - 556 pages
...either by 7, or by some multiple of 7. In other words, members of the same group stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music." The table given by Xewlands brings out the relation to which he refers. It is of such historical interest...
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The Study of Chemical Composition: An Account of Its Method and Historical ...

Ida Freund - 1904 - 682 pages
...either by 7 or by some multiple of 7 ; in other words, members of the same group stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music. Thus in the nitrogen group, between nitrogen and phosphorus there are 1 Chem. News, London, 7 — 13,...
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A History of Chemistry

Francis Paul Armitage - 1906 - 304 pages
...either by 7 or some multiple of 7 ; in other words, how members of the same group stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music." This peculiar relationship he would term provisionally the " Law of Octaves." Undoubtedly the law of octaves...
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A History of Chemical Theories and Laws

Matthew Moncrieff Pattison Muir - 1906 - 610 pages
...note of an octave in music." i * Again : " Members of the same group [of elements] stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music." i And once more : "In conformity with the 'law of octaves,' elements belonging to the same group generally...
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Principles of Inorganic Chemistry

Harry Clary Jones - 1906 - 560 pages
...either by 7, or by some multiple of 7. In other words, members of the same group stand to each other in the same relation as the extremities of one or more octaves in music." The table given by Newlands brings out the relation to which he refers. It is of such historical interest...
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The New England Medical Gazette, Volume 43

1908 - 590 pages
...into such groups that elements similar to one another in chemical behavior occur in the same columns r and that, moreover, the number of elements between...between these little fundamentals of the universe, hut a veritable harmony." Briefly and technically, the law states that "the properties of an element...
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