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         Harden Sir Arthur:     more detail
  1. Sir Arthur Evans, 1851-1941: A Memoir by Donald B. Harden, 1983-03-01
  2. Sir Arthur Evans: An Illustrated Memoir by D. B. Harden, 1983-06

61. The Antiquary By Sir Walter Scott : Arthur's Classic Novels
The faith of sir arthur, as an antiquary, was boundless, and Mr. Oldbuck We harden ourselves in vain, continued the Antiquary, pursuing his own train
http://arthurwendover.com/arthurs/scott/antqry10.html
This document was prepared with borrowed Project Gutenberg etext for Arthur's Classic Novels. XHTML markup by Arthur Wendover. December 30, 2002. (see source file for details) This is the etext version of the book The Antiquary by Sir Walter Scott, taken from the original etext antqry10.txt. Arthur's Classic Novels
The Antiquary
by Sir Walter Scott, Bart.
I knew Anselmo. He was shrewd and prudent,
Wisdom and cunning had their shares of him;
But he was shrewish as a wayward child,
And pleased again by toys which childhood please;
As book of fables, graced with print of wood,
Or else the jingling of a rusty medal,
Or the rare melody of some old ditty,
That first was sung to please King Pepin's cradle
Introduction The present work completes a series of fictitious narratives, intended to illustrate the manners of Scotland at three different periods. Waverley embraced the age of our fathers, Guy Mannering that of our own youth, and the Antiquary I have been more solicitous to describe manners minutely than to arrange in any case an artificial and combined narrative, and have but to regret that I felt myself unable to unite these two requisites of a good Novel. The knavery of the adept in the following sheets may appear forced and improbable; but we have had very late instances of the force of superstitious credulity to a much greater extent, and the reader may be assured, that this part of the narrative is founded on a fact of actual occurrence.

62. BBC NEWS | N Ireland | Army Operation 'would Cause Casualties'
casualties and would further harden the Catholic population s attitude. sir arthur Hockaday, then an adviser on Northern Ireland in the Cabinet
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/2546193.stm
CATEGORIES TV RADIO COMMUNICATE ... INDEX SEARCH
You are in: N Ireland News Front Page World UK ... Programmes SERVICES Daily E-mail News Ticker Mobile/PDAs Text Only ... Help EDITIONS Change to World Thursday, 5 December, 2002, 12:32 GMT Army operation 'would cause casualties'
Thirteen civilians were killed on Bloody Sunday
The Saville Inquiry has heard the government had been discussing a major Army operation in Londonderry in 1972 which would have involved numerous civilian casualties. Minutes from a Cabinet meeting a couple of weeks before Bloody Sunday said a military operation to restore law and order would necessarily lead to many civilian casualties and would further harden the Catholic population's attitude. On 30 January 1972, paratroops opened fire on civilians at a civil rights march in the Bogside in Londonderry killing 13 people. Another man died later.
There was of course then always the danger, simply as a matter of practical fact, that an innocent bystander might be hit
Sir Arthur Hockaday The Bloody Sunday Inquiry was told the January 11 1972 Cabinet meeting on Northern Ireland, chaired by the then Prime Minister Sir Edward Heath, concluded: "As to Londonderry, a military operation to reimpose law and order would require seven battalions and would probably involve the commitment for a long time of four battalions to the city.

63. Findings:@Everything2.com
arthur harden Clement sir Coxsone Dodd sir PK_root (category) If you Log in you could create a sir Patrick Abercrombie Prize node.
http://everything2.com/index.pl?node=Sir Patrick Abercrombie Prize

64. AIP International Catalog Of Sources
Halliday, William Reginald, sir, 18861966. harden, arthur, sir, 1865-1940.Heisenberg, Werner, 1901-1976. Hetherington, AL (arthur Lonsdale), 1881-1960.
http://www.aip.org/history/catalog/704.html
If you are not immediately redirected, please click here
My List - Help Browse Archival Resources Archival Finding Aids Books Photos Browse FAQs Past Searches History Home Search: Author Subject Title Journal/Newspaper Title Series Computer File (Software) Title Video Title Refine Search AIP Niels Bohr Library
Item Information Holdings More by this author Richardson, O. W. (Owen Willans), 1879-1959. Subjects Board of Scientific Societies. Carnegie Institution of Washington. Geophysical Laboratory. National Physical Laboratory (Great Britain) Clerk Maxwell Celebration. Solvay Conference on Physics. Atoms History. Cathode rays. Electrons Emission. Hydrogen bonding. Hydrogen Spectra. Molecules Models. Nobel Prizes. Photoelectricity. Photoemission. Physicists. Spectrum analysis. Thermionic emission. X-rays. Browse Catalog by author: Richardson, O. W. (Owen Willans), 1879-1959. by title: Papers, 1897-1959, (... MARC Display Papers, 1897-1959, (bulk 1920-1940) by Richardson, O. W. (Owen Willans), 1879-1959. Description: 144 boxes (72 linear feet) Use and Reproduction : Owning Repository: University of Texas at Austin. Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center. P.O. Drawer 7219, Austin, TX 78713-7219.

65. Fall 2003 Center For History Of Physics Newsletter
Contact Archivist. Papers of sir Francis arthur Vick, 19111998. His originalname is Bernard harden Porter. 1943-1992. 2 cu. ft.
http://www.aip.org/history/newsletter/fall2003/docpres.htm

Volume XXXV , No. 2, Fall 2003 Documentation Preserved
Papers of
UK SURVEY RECORDS British Library. Department of Manuscripts. 96 Euston Road, London NW1 2DB, England. Contact: Archivist. Addition to the Papers of Papers of Notebooks, etc. of s Pass, obtainable by personal applicants. Letters of scientists, mainly to John Tatlock s Pass, obtainable by personal applicants. Cambridge University Library. Department of Manuscripts and University Archives. West Road, Cambridge, CH3 9DR, England. Contact: Archivist. Experimental notebooks on ice of J. (James) McConnell, 1860-1890 Churchill College. Archives Centre. Cambridge CB3 0DS, England. Contact: Archivist. Papers on the development of radar of E. G. Bowen Papers of B. C. Browne . Collection consists of correspondence with Sir John Cockcroft with proposals for a geophysical survey of oceans, 1949. Geologist, Geodesy and Geophysics Dept., Cambridge University. 1949. 1 file. Open to researchers with a prior appointment and two forms of identification. Papers of W. E. Burcham, 1913-

66. Memoirs Of Extraordinary Popular Delusions And The Madness Of Crowds
So I pardon sir arthur for accepting the practice of Christianity as he found Missionary work is far less likely to harden hearts than armed invasion.
http://home.ddc.net/ygg/cwar/pillar1.htm
Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds
April 4, 2002 Before I begin this review of "Extraordinary Popular Delusions" I should offer a few introductory remarks about the Seven Pillars. The Seven Pillars listed here, and those books listed under each pillar, form a perfect circle. In reviewing those books, I will attempt to put forward a unified theory of Euro-American nationalism. In addition, these reviews should provide you with a framework for forecasting the future, within broad limits. I should note that a few of the pillars have significant flaws. For example, the first three chapters of "The Collapse of Complex Societies" by Joseph Tainter set forth his critique of alternate theories of societal collapse. These chapters set a new low in academic pettiness and arrogance. They are not worthy of any book. But then suddenly in chapter 4 the waters part and the heavens open up upon a transcendently brilliant analysis. In addition, The Dispossessed Majority, the first explicit Euro-American nationalist work, contains a disturbing residue of nostalgia for a Northern European nationalism. I suspect that the condescending treatment of our Eastern and Southern European brothers was intended as a political expedient to induce the northern Europeans of the author's acquaintance to accept the reality of a pan-European nationalism. However, once past that irritant, the book is an epic breakthrough which marks the rejection of imperialism and "white triumphalism," - setting forth the foundations of modern Euro-American nationalism by cataloging our vulnerability to displacement.

67. LP: Nobel Prizes (Men Vs Women)
1930 Hans Fischer, 1929 arthur harden, Hans von EulerChelpin, 1981 JamesTobin, 1980 Lawrence R. Klein, 1979 Theodore W. Schultz, sir arthur Lewis,
http://www.libertypost.org/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=103984

68. Technical Information
1929, sir arthur harden Hans Karl August Simon Von EulerChelpin - fermentationof sugar and fermentative enzymes. 1930, Hans Fischer - constitution of
http://www.accustandard.com/asi/tech_info.php3
if(document.all) document.write(''); else document.write(''); Technical Information Unit Conversions Literature Downloads Periodic Table of Elements EPA Method Downloads ... A Century of Nobel Prize Winners in Chemistry MSDSs available Online Log In and search by Catalog Number, then click on Product Detail when you need them. Unit Conversions To Convert Into Multiply By Temperature ºF ºC 0.556ºC- 17.8 ºC ºF 1.8ºC + 32 ºC ºK 1.0ºC + 273 Length mils microns mils millimeters inches mils inches centimeters Mass ounces grams pounds kilograms grams ounces Kilograms Pounds Liquid Volume ounces milliliters pints Liters quarts liters gallons liters Milliliters Ounces Liters Pints Liters Quarts Liters Gallons cubic feet cubic meters cubic yards cubic meters Universal Gas Constant R = 0.0821(Atm)(l)/(ºK)(mole) Acceleration Due to Gravity g = 32.17 ft/secÝ, 9.8 m/secÝ Avogadro's Constant N = 6.023 X 1023 molecules/mole Speed of Light c = 186,000 miles/sec, 3 X 1010 cm/sec Heat of Fusion (water 1 atm, 0ºC) Hf = 79.7 cal/g Heat of Vaporization (water 1 atm, 100ºC)

69. Result Of Desired Function
harden, sir arthur VON EULERCHELPIN, HANS KARL AUGUST SIMON. for theirinvestigations on the fermentation of sugar and fermentative enzymes
http://chemistry.sogang.ac.kr/ChemInfo/Nobel.html
VAN'T HOFF, JACOBUS HENRICUS
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by the discovery of the laws of chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure in solutions" FISCHER, HERMANN EMIL
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered by his work on sugar and purine syntheses" ARRHENIUS, SVANTE AUGUST
"in recognition of the extraordinary services he has rendered to the advancement of chemistry by his electrolytic theory of dissociation" RAMSAY, Sir WILLIAM
"in recognition of his services in the discovery of the inert gaseous elements in air, and his determination of their place in the periodic system" VON BAEYER, JOHANN FRIEDRICH WILHELM ADOLF
"in recognition of his services in the advancement of organic chemistry and the chemical industry, through his work on organic dyes and hydroaromatic compounds" MOISSAN, HENRI

70. Gosford.htm
which satirises the quiet and indolent ease of sir arthur Acheson the 2nd Earl Camden; James harden; Francis Saunderson of Castle Saunderson, Co.
http://www.proni.gov.uk/records/private/gosford.htm
PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE of NORTHERN IRELAND
The Gosford Papers (D/1606 and D/2259)
PAGE MENU
Family history.
Swiftian associations.

Family estates.

William Greig's survey.
...
A visit to Gosford Castle in 1862.

Gosford Castle The cost of building Gosford Castle.
Encumbered estates.

Title deeds and leases.

Agents' correspondence and related papers.
...
The Governorship of Lower Canada.

Gosford Castle
Summary
The Gosford Papers consist of c.40,000 documents and c.300 volumes relating mainly to the estates (in Cos Armagh and Cavan) and financial affairs of the Acheson family of Markethill, Co. Armagh, successively baronets of Nova Scotia (1628), Barons, Viscounts and Earls of Gosford in the peerage of Ireland (1776, 1785 and 1806 respectively) and Barons Worlingham and Acheson in the peerage of the United Kingdom (1835 and 1847). Broadly speaking, they all fall within the period c.1750-c.1960. The papers of the 2nd Earl of Gosford as Governor of Lower Canada, 1835-1838, are separately referenced under D/2259: all the rest bear reference D/1606.
Family history
The following brief of Gosford family history is taken (in the main) from a chance reference in the Rev Edmund Farrer's Portraits in West Suffolk Houses ... (London, 1908) and from a newspaper account in the archive of an attempted sale of Gosford Castle, c.1925 (the castle was not actually sold until after the Second World War): 'Gosford Castle, near Markethill, with 645 acres, is for sale. This involves the severance from the county of Armagh of the Acheson family, which has been intimately associated with it for the past 324 years. The estate was acquired by ... [them] in the reign of James I [1611]. Since that time the name appears frequently in the roll of sheriffs and of members of parliament for the county, and several members of the family have filled the office of Vice-Admiral of Ulster. ...'

71. The 73rd Annual Academy Awards (2001) (TV)
Himself Co-Presenter Best Original Screenplay (as sir arthur C. Clarke) Marcia Gay harden (in POLLOCK)was my choice for supporting actress but I
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0280387/
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72. Chemists That Shaped The Science
(18631944); Charles Martin Hall, (1863-1914); Walther Hermann Nernst, (1864-1941);Richard Adolf Zsigmondy, (1865-1929); sir arthur harden, (1865-1940)
http://www.pmf.ukim.edu.mk/PMF/Chemistry/chemists/chemists.htm
Institute of Chemistry
Chemists
This site contains a list of the most important people who have contributed to the development of chemistry. It is planned to include a biography with the most important details of their life and their scientific contribution. The list is chronological by the date of birth. To locate someone on the list, the browser's 'find' function can be used. If you want to submit a biography or have any comments on any of the already published materaial, please contact one of the authors of the list. It would be preferable that the subimissions be in Engish but other languages are also acceptable. If you are aware of any other sites that contain a bioghrphy please supply the link so the material can be used.
  • Zosimus, (~250-?) Geber, Abu Musa Jabir Ibn Hayyan, (~721-~815) Rhazes, Abu Bakr Muhamed Ibn Zakariyya Ar-Razi, (~845-~930) Arnold de Villanova, (~1235-1311) Geber Vannoccio Biringuccio, (1480-1539) Philipus Aureolus Paracelsus, (1493-1541) Georgius Agricola, (1494-1555) Lazarus Ercker, (1530-1594)
  • 73. The Prize
    1929 arthur harden, Hans von EulerChelpin 1928 Adolf Windaus 1927 Heinrich Wieland 1979 Theodore W. Schultz, sir arthur Lewis 1978 Herbert A. Simon
    http://www.hosted-webs.com/prize/
    hosted by hosted-webs.com HISTORY of NOBEL PRIZE Winning a Nobel Prize is a life-changing honor. Whether the laureate is an internationally known figure (such as Nelson Mandela, winner of the 1993 Peace Prize) or a scientist plucked from obscurity (like Richard R. Ernst, who won the 1991 prize in chemistry for refinements in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy), the award brings with it worldwide recognition that highlights one's life work and provides the funds to continue and further the mission. For academics and institutions, a Nobel Prize is used to attract the best and the brightest minds, whether students or scholars.
    ALFRED B. NOBEL Alfred B. Nobel (1833–1896), the Swedish chemist and engineer who invented dynamite, left $9 million in his will to establish the Nobel Prizes, which are awarded annually, without regard to nationality, in six areas (peace, literature, physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, and economic science) "to those who, during the preceding year, shall have conferred the greatest benefit on mankind." At first glance, it seems odd that the inventor of a powerful explosive would endow a group of awards that includes a peace prize. But Nobel was an industrialist with a conscience. He is credited with creating a controllable combustible that made blasting rock and the construction of canals and tunnels a relatively safe process. Nobel also contributed to the inventions of synthetic rubber, artificial silk, and synthetic leather. He held more than 350 patents. His interests were not limited to science. In fact, he was a lover of English literature and poetry and wrote several novels and poems. At his death, he left a library of more than 1,500 books, from fiction to philosophy.

    74. The Implication Of Convergence On Human Origins
    Moreover, if there is not in the diet that which will harden the bone in the earlier Keith, sir arthur quoted by sir John A. Thompson in The Outline of
    http://custance.org/old/evol/3ch3/3ch3.html
    Convergence and the Origin of Man: Chapter 3
    The Implication of Convergence on Human Origins
    IT IS well known that the human skull is plastic enough that it may, in the adult stage, be modified towards a more apelike form if the eating habits of the ape are simulated in one way or another by man. The question bears examination because many of the skulls of early man have undoubtedly been deformed in the direction of the ape skull for what Portmann (59) would have termed "historical" (as opposed to genetic) reasons. Such deformation can occur within a single lifetime. It is, of course, not inherited by the offspring, but if the conditions of life persist over several generations, chances are that a few skulls will be preserved as fossils whose configuration might give the impression that their owners were not far removed by descent from an apelike subhuman ancestor, whereas, in point of fact, no such relationship need be postulated. Wilson D. Wallis observed years ago: (60) The evidence of prehistoric human remains does not in itself justify the inference of a common ancestry with the apes. We base this conclusion on the fact . . . that practically all the changes in man's structure traceable through prehistoric remains are the result of changes in food and habit. The most notable changes are found in the skull. Briefly the story of changes is to: a higher frontal region, increased bregmatic height, smaller superciliary ridges, increased head width, less facial projection, decreased height of orbits and a shifting of the transverse diameter downward laterally, a more ovoid palate, smaller teeth, diminished relative size of the third molar, shorter, wider and more ovoid mandible, decrease in size of condyles, decrease in distance between condylar and coronoid processes, and in general greater smoothness, less prominent bony protuberances, less of the angularity and "savageness" of appearance which characterizes the apes. This is evolution in type, but the evolution is result rather than cause, . . .

    75. Arthur Harden
    arthur harden. sir arthur harden (12 pazdziernika 1865 17 czerwca 1940),biochemik angielski, laureat Nagrody Nobla z chemii 1929.
    http://encyklopedia.servis.pl/wiki/Arthur_Harden
    Nauka i Edukacja w Science Servis - Polski Serwis Naukowy Astronomia Biologia Chemia Fizyka ... Encyklopedia
    Sir Arthur Harden 12 października 17 czerwca ), biochemik angielski , laureat Nagrody Nobla z chemii Od wykładał na uniwersytecie w Manchesterze , w został profesorem Uniwersytetu w Londynie . W latach kierował wydziałem biochemicznym Instytutu Jennera (p³Åºniej przemianowanego na Instytut Listera). W został przyjęty w poczet członk³w londyńskiego Royal Society , był wydawcą "The Biochemical Journal" ( Początkowo zajmował się w pracy naukowej wpływem światła na mieszaninę chloru z dwutlenkiem węgla . Prowadził badania nad związkami pośrednimi i procesami fermentacji alkoholowej, wsp³lnie z W. Youngiem wyizolował heksozodifosforan. Zajmował się także atomistyczną teorią materii. Wraz ze Szwedem Hansem von Eulerem-Chelpinem otrzymał Nagrodę Nobla w dziedzinie chemii w za zbadanie fermentacji cukr³w i enzym³w fermentacyjnych. Niekt³re prace:
    • Alcoholic Fermentation A New View of the Origin of Dalton's Atomic Theory , z H. E. Roscoe)

    76. Famous People Born In NorthWest England
    sir arthur harden 18651940 Biochemist. Emmeline Pankhurst 1858-1928 Campaignedfor womens right to vote. John Thaw 1942-2002 Actor
    http://www.localhistories.org/northwestfam.html
    FAMOUS PEOPLE FROM NORTH WEST ENGLAND By Tim Lambert ASHTON-UNDER-LYNE Dawn Acton 1977- Actress BLACKPOOL Michael Smith 1932- Chemist BOLTON Samuel Crompton 1752-1827 Inventor of the spinning mule (1779) William Lassell 1799-1880 Astronomer Viscount Leverhulme 1851-1925 Industrialist BIRKENHEAD Edward Bevan 1856-1921 Chemist Sir Lewis Casson 1875-1969 Actor Glenda Jackson 1937- Actress Norman Thelwell 1923-2004 Cartoonist BLACKBURN John Morley 1838-1923 Writer BLACKPOOL Michael Smith 1932- Biochemist BURY Sir Robert Peel 1788-1850 Founded the first modern police force and was twice Prime minister Nikki Sanderson 1986- Actress BURNLEY Sir Ian McKellan 1939- Actor CLIFTON, CUMBRIA John 'Iron Mad' Wilkinson 1728-1808 Industrialist CARLISLE Bernard Barton 1784-1849 Poet William Best 1829-1897 Musician Mandell Crieghton 1843-1901 Historian COCKERMOUTH William Wordsworth 1770-1850 Poet CHORLEY Sir Norman Haworth 1883-1950 Chemist Henry Tate 1819-1899 Businessman and founder of the Tate Gallery DALTON IN FURNESS George Romney 1734-1802 Artist ECCLES Robert Ainsworth 1660-1743 Lexicographer Sydney Chapman 1888-1970 Mathematician KENDAL Sir Arthur Edington 1882-1944 Astronomer LANCASTER Laurence Binyon 1869-1943 Poet Henry Cort 1740-1800 Inventor Sir John Fleming 1849-1945 Electronic engineer Sir richard Owen 1804-1892 Biologist William Whewell 1794-1866 Philosopher LIVERPOOL It goes without saying that the Beatles were born in Liverpool!

    77. Princess Ida Review 1
    The music is easily recognisable as that of sir arthur Sullivan, for, among hisoperas, his characteristics harden and crystallise, and break into song
    http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~melbear/downunder/idareview1.htm
    Original Australian Cast
    Saturday, July 16th, 1887 King Hildebrand Mr. Howard Vernon Hilarion Mr. Leumane Cyril Mr. W. H. Woodfield Florian Mr. F. Frederici King Gama Mr. William Elton Arac H. Benham Princess Ida Miss Colbourne Barber Lady Blanche Miss Alice Barnett Lady Physche Miss Aggie Kelton Melissa Miss Ida Osborne REVIEW OF THE AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE OF 'PRINCESS IDA' After an absence from Melbourne of four months, Messrs. Williamson, Garner and Musgrove's Comic Opera Company returned to their old locale , the Princess's Theatre, on Saturday evening, and gave the first performance of a new operatic season. The announcement of a new opera by Mr. W.S. Gilbert and Sir Arthur Sullivan attracted, as what might have been expected, an audience which filled the whole theatre to its utmost capacity. Although never before performed in Melbourne, Princess Ida is not the latest production of the author and composer. It was brought out in London in 1884, before the Mikado, and in it Mr. H. Bracy, well known here, sustained the leading tenor Princess Ida is described by Mr. Gilbert as being "a respectful per-version" of the laureate's well known poem, The Princess. Mr. Gilbert first tried it out as a drama, with incidental music, performed more than 10 years since at one of the London West End theatres, and much of the dialogue remains the same as then. His pungent satire is everywhere perceptible in the treatment of the subject, the incidents and characters being admirably adapted to his humorous and epigrammatic style.

    78. 73rd Annual Academy Awards Coverage (2001) | Digital Hit Entertainment
    And the Oscar® goes to Marcia Gay harden for Pollock. Keeping with a 2001theme, he introduced sir arthur C. Clarke by satellite from Sri Lanka.
    http://www.digitalhit.com/academy/73/
    Academy Awards
    Check out our red carpet photos or backstage interview quotes

    Catherine Zeta-Jones
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Pollock . With Kate Hudson being the front-runner, there was a whoop of surprise from the press in the press room. Steve Martin introduced the next presenter, Russell Crowe by saying "I like to call him a close personal friend, but he's asked me not to." He was there to hand out the award for Best Film Editing. And the Oscar® goes to Traffic Ben Stiller Quiero Ser (I Want To Be...) Father and Daughter Halle Berry then introduced the first musical performance of the evening, Sting performing My Funny Friend and Me from Annette Bening introduced the first clip of the evening: Erin Brockovich Gladiator Angelina Jolie Traffic Mike Myers Gladiator U-571 Julia Stiles introduced the next musical performance: Coco Lee performing "A Love Before Time" from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Julia Roberts Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon Three time nominee Morgan Freeman introduced the next clip for Best Picture: Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

    79. RDFunding - Research And Development Information Details Of The Award
    Aims, The Society s harden Conferences are held in memory of sir arthur harden,FRS a distinguished Professor of Biochemistry at the Lister Institute of
    http://www.rdfunding.org.uk/Queries/ListGrantDetails.asp?GrantID=8374

    80. Winners Of The Nobel Prize In Chemistry
    1929 sir arthur harden and Hans Karl August Simon von EulerChelpin Enzymes inthe fermentation process. 1930 Hans Fischer Structure of hemin and
    http://www.ccl.net/cca/documents/dyoung/topics-orig/nobel.html
    Winners of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
    Jacobus Hendricus van't Hoff Chemical dynamics and osmotic pressure. Emil Hermann Fischer Work on carbohydrates and purines. Svante August Arrhenius Theory of electrolytic dissociation. Sir William Ramsay Discovery of helium, neon, xenon and krypton. Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf von Baeyer Synthetic organic chemistry, particularily for the synthesis of indigo and triphenylmethane dyes. Preparing pure fluorine and developing the electric furnace (the Moissan furnace). Eduard Buchner Biochemical research including discovery of cell-less fermentation (fermentation in a test tube by extracting the active enzymes from yeast cells). Ernest Rutherford Study of radioactive substances. Friedrich Wilhelm Ostwald Work on catalysis, chemical equilibrium and reaction rates. Otto Wallach Work on alicyclic compounds. Marie Curie Chemistry of radioactive isotopes. Francois Auguste Victor Grignard Discovery of the Grignard reaction.
    also Paul Sabatier Study of metal catalysts and particularily the hydrogenation of unsaturated organic molecules. Alfred Werner Work in coordination chemistry.

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