| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Smithson Clinic, Inc. Practitioners, Gail Smithson, Melanie Smithson,... smithsonclinic.com |
Smithson Tennant FRS (30 November 1761 - 22 February 1815) was an English chemist. Tennant is best known for his discovery of the elements iridium and osmium, which he found in the residues from the solution of platinum ores in 1803. He also contributed to the proof of the identity of diamond and charcoal. The mineral tennantite is named after him. Tennant was born in Selby in Yorkshire. He attended Beverley Grammar School (the oldest state school in Britain, founded AD700) and there is a plaque over one of the entrances to the present school commemorating his discovery of the two elements, osmium and iridium. He began to study medicine at Edinburgh in 1781, but in a few months moved to Cambridge, where he devoted himself to botany and chemistry. He graduated M.D. at Cambridge in 1796,[1] and about the same time purchased an estate near Cheddar, where he carried out agricultural experiments. He was appointed professor of chemistry at Cambridge in 1813, but lived to deliver only one course of lectures, being killed near Boulogne-sur-Mer by the fall of a bridge over which he was riding. [edit] References
[edit] Further readingMary D. Archer, Christopher D. Haley. The 1702 Chair of Chemistry at Cambridge. Cambridge, 2005, ISBN 0521828732, 9780521828734. [edit] External links
Categories: 1761 births | 1815 deaths | People from Selby | English chemists | Fellows of the Royal Society | Alumni of the University of Cambridge (Unknown College) | Discoverers of chemical elements | Academics of the University of Cambridge | Recipients of the Copley Medal | Accidental human deaths in France | ||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |