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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lothar_MeyerLothar Meyer - Wikipedia

    Julius Lothar Meyer (19 August 1830 – 11 April 1895) was a German chemist. He was one of the pioneers in developing the earliest versions of the periodic table of the chemical elements. The Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev (his chief rival) and he had both worked with Robert Bunsen.

  2. Apr 7, 2024 · Lothar Meyer (born Aug. 19, 1830, Varel, Oldenburg [Germany]—died April 11, 1895, Tübingen) was a German chemist who, independently of Dmitry Mendeleyev, developed a periodic classification of the chemical elements.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Julius Lothar Meyer (1830–1895) and Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev (1834–1907) worked at the University of Heidelberg only five years apart—both under the direction of Robert Bunsen—but they arrived there with significantly different backgrounds. Meyer was virtually born into a scientific career.

  4. May 25, 2024 · A biographical sketch of Lothar Meyer, a German chemist who published the first edition of his book "Die Modernen Theorien der Chemie" in 1864. The article also discusses his contributions to the periodic law, atomic weights, and comparative chemistry.

  5. Apr 11, 2020 · Meyer died on April 11, 1895, in Tübingen. Lothar Meyer is best known for his work on the periodic table of the elements. In 1860, he attended the first international congress in chemistry held in Karlsruhe, Germany, where—among discussions of many other important chemical concepts—the atomic weights of elements and methods for their ...

  6. Aug 19, 2017 · Learn about the life and achievements of Julius Lothar Meyer, who discovered the periodic law of chemical elements independently of Dmitri Mendeleev. Find out how he classified elements by valence, predicted new elements, and proposed the structure of benzene.

  7. Jun 19, 2013 · Both men are now important names in the history of science: Dmitri Mendeleev and Julius Lothar Meyer. Each man created a periodic system of the elements. And while Meyer’s first version of his table appeared in 1864 and Mendeleev’s not until 1869, it is Mendeleev who has become widely known as the single parent of the periodic table.

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