

For Android → Periodic Table 2024 PRO v3.2.8
Published by: voska89 on 2-03-2024, 21:53 |
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Free Download Periodic Table 2024 PRO v3.2.8 | Android | 36.39 MB
The chemistry falls into to number of the most important sciences and is one of the main school objects.
Video Training → Hacking The Periodic Table 2 - Chemistry Of The Elements
Published by: voska89 on 11-11-2022, 08:28 |
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Last updated 4/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 1.86 GB | Duration: 4h 21m
A Course about the Chemistry of Main Group 5 to 8, Reactions, Concepts and Applications for Practical Knowledge
Video Training → Hacking The Periodic Table 1 - Chemistry Of The Elements
Published by: voska89 on 11-11-2022, 08:27 |
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Last updated 2/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 1.84 GB | Duration: 4h 0m
A Course about the Chemistry of Main Group 1 to 4, Reactions, Concepts and Applications for Practical Knowledge
Video Training → Udemy - Hacking the Periodic Table I - Inorganic Chemistry
Published by: voska89 on 1-03-2022, 20:22 |
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Last Update: 2/2022
Duration: 3h 59m | Video: .MP4, 1280x720 30 fps | Audio: AAC, 48 kHz, 2ch | Size: 1.83 GB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English
Video Training → The Great Courses - Understanding the Periodic Table
Published by: voska89 on 17-07-2021, 17:01 |
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h264, yuv420p, 1280x720 | ENGLISH, 22050 Hz, 2channel | 12h 27mn | 10.5 GB
The basic elements that make up all matter on Earth have existed from the planet's earliest days, but it wasn't until the 18th century that debates emerged about the mapping and classification of such elements. After a series of new and exciting discoveries in the bustling field of chemistry-including nitrogen in 1772, followed by oxygen in 1774-a sense of urgency captured the scientific community. What were scientists to make of these "new" elements? And why did they so often struggle to reach consensus in the discovery of these crucial world-building materials? The story of the periodic table of elements is, in some ways, a map of the history of chemistry and scientific classification of matter.
By the late 18th century, the desire to organize and thus better understand our physical world was not a new phenomenon. The ancient Greek philosopher, Aristotle, sought to categorize living beings into two groups-"blooded" and "bloodless". In the 1730s, the Swedish botanist, Carl Linnaeus, developed a naming system that sorted live organisms into a breadth of categories. What ultimately emerged from 18th-century debates about the classification of elements was a decision to establish a similar set of standards: the qualities, properties, and behaviors of elements.

