Name
|
Date
|
Discoverer
|
Notes
|
Vanadium
|
1801[1][2]
|
Andrés Manuel del Río
|
Originally called panchromium, and later erythronium, by its discoverer, but the discovery was not recognized at the time. It was called vanadium by Nils Gabriel Sefström, who rediscovered it 29 years later.
|
Niobium
|
1801[1][2]
|
Charles Hatchett
|
Named columbium by discoverer.
|
Tantalum
|
1802[1][2]
|
Anders Gustaf Ekeberg
|
Cerium
|
1803[1][2]
|
Martin Heinrich Klaproth; Jöns Jakob Berzelius and Wilhelm Hisinger
|
Named after the newly discovered asteroid, Ceres. Discovered nearly simultaneously in two laboratories, though it was later shown that Berzelius and Hisinger's cerium was actually a mixture of cerium, lanthanum and so-called didymium.
|
Rhodium
|
1803[1][2]
|
William Hyde Wollaston
|
Palladium
|
1803[1][2]
|
William Hyde Wollaston
|
Named after the newly discovered asteroid, Pallas.
|
Osmium
|
1803[1][2]
|
Smithson Tennant
|
Iridium
|
1803[1][2]
|
Smithson Tennant
|
Potassium
|
1807[1][2]
|
Humphry Davy
|
Discovered using electricity from the Voltaic pile to decompose the salts of alkali metals.
|
Sodium
|
1807[1][2]
|
Humphry Davy
|
Discovered using electricity from the Voltaic pile to decompose the salts of alkali metals; discovered a few days after potassium, using the same method.
|
Calcium
|
1808[1][2]
|
Humphry Davy
|
Discovered using electricity from the Voltaic pile to decompose the salts of alkali metals.
|
Barium
|
1808[1][2]
|
Humphry Davy
|
Discovered using electricity from the Voltaic pile to decompose the salts of alkali metals.
|
Boron
|
1808[1][2]
|
Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac & Louis-Jacques Thenard
|
Iodine
|
1811[1][2]
|
Bernard Courtois
|
Lithium
|
1817[1][2]
|
Johan August Arfwedson
|
Cadmium
|
1817[1][2]
|
Friedrich Strohmeyer Independently discovered by K.S.L Hermann
|
Selenium
|
1817[1][2]
|
Jöns Jakob Berzelius
|
Silicon
|
1823[1][2]
|
Jöns Jakob Berzelius
|
Aluminium
|
1825[1][2]
|
Hans Christian Ørsted
|
|
Bromine
|
1826[1][2]
|
Antoine Jérôme Balard
|
Thorium
|
1828[1][2]
|
Jöns Jakob Berzelius
|
Beryllium
|
1828[1][2]
|
Friedrich Wöhler. Independently discovered by A.A.B. Bussy
|
Discovered as an oxide in beryl and emerald by Louis Nicolas Vauquelin in 1798, but not isolated until 1828.
|
Lanthanum
|
1839-41[1][2]
|
Carl Gustaf Mosander
|
Discovered when Mosander showed that the cerium isolated in 1803 by Berzelius was actually a mixture of cerium, lanthanum and so-called didymium.
|
Terbium
|
1843[1][2]
|
Carl Gustaf Mosander
|
Erbium
|
1843[1][2]
|
Carl Gustaf Mosander
|
Ruthenium
|
1844[1][2]
|
Karl Klaus
|
Caesium
|
1860[1][2]
|
Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff
|
First identified by its blue spectroscopic emission line.
|
Rubidium
|
1860[1][2]
|
Robert Bunsen and Gustav Kirchhoff
|
First identified by its red spectroscopic emission line.
|
Thallium
|
1861[1][2]
|
Sir William Crookes
|
First identified by its bright green spectroscopic emission line.
|
Indium
|
1863[1][2]
|
Ferdinand Reich and Theodor Richter
|
First identified by its indigo-blue spectroscopic emission line.
|
Helium
|
1868[1][2]
|
Independently by Pierre Jansen and Norman Lockyer
|
First identified by astronomers as an emission line in the spectrum of the sun.
|
Gallium
|
1875[1][2]
|
Paul Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran
|
Predicted by Mendeleev in 1871 as ekaaluminium.
|
Ytterbium
|
1878[1][2]
|
Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac
|
Thulium
|
1879[1][2]
|
Per Teodor Cleve
|
Scandium
|
1879[1][2]
|
Lars Fredrik Nilson
|
Predicted by Mendeleev in 1871 as ekaboron.
|
Holmium
|
1879[1][2]
|
Marc Delafontaine, Jacques-Louis Soret and Per Teodor Cleve
|
Samarium
|
1879[1][2]
|
Paul Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran
|
Gadolinium
|
1880[1][2]
|
Jean Charles Galissard de Marignac
|
Praseodymium
|
1885[1][2]
|
Carl Auer von Welsbach
|
The didymium isolated by Mosander in 1839 was shown to be two separate elements; praseodymium and neodymium.
|
Neodymium
|
1885[1][2]
|
Carl Auer von Welsbach
|
The didymium isolated by Mosander in 1839 was shown to be two separate elements, praseodymium and neodymium.
|
Dysprosium
|
1886[1][2]
|
Paul Emile Lecoq de Boisbaudran
|
Germanium
|
1886[1][2]
|
Clemens Winkler
|
Predicted by Mendeleev in 1871 as ekasilicon.
|
Fluorine
|
1886[1][2]
|
Joseph Henri Moissan
|
Argon
|
1894[1][2]
|
Lord Rayleigh & Sir William Ramsay
|
Discovered by comparing the molecular weights of nitrogen prepared by liquefaction from air and nitrogen prepared by chemical means.
|
Neon
|
1898[1][2]
|
Sir William Ramsay
|
Separated from liquid argon by difference in boiling point.
|
Krypton
|
1898[1][2]
|
Sir William Ramsay
|
Separated from liquid argon by difference in boiling point.
|
Xenon
|
1898[1][2]
|
Sir William Ramsay
|
Separated from liquid argon by difference in boiling point.
|
Radium
|
1898[1][2]
|
Pierre Curie and Marie Curie
|
Polonium
|
1898[1][2]
|
Pierre Curie and Marie Curie
|
Radon
|
1898[1][2]
|
Friedrich Ernst Dorn, who called it niton
|
Discovered as a product of the radioactive decay of radium.
|
Actinium
|
1899[1][2]
|
André-Louis Debierne
|