When we consider the very important part which the two elements of hydrogen and oxygen seem to perform in the arrangement of chemical compounds, we are inclined to wonder that no more than one compound of these two elements themselves should be found.


In: Henry Enfield Roscoe, John Dalton and the Rise of Modern Chemistry, Chapter VI (p. 139)


When we consider the very important part which the two elements of hydrogen and oxygen seem to perform in the arrangement of chemical compounds, we...

When we consider the very important part which the two elements of hydrogen and oxygen seem to perform in the arrangement of chemical compounds, we...

When we consider the very important part which the two elements of hydrogen and oxygen seem to perform in the arrangement of chemical compounds, we...

When we consider the very important part which the two elements of hydrogen and oxygen seem to perform in the arrangement of chemical compounds, we...