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Chemistry Pages:
A level
Reaction catalogues, exam tips, spectra, worksheets, articles and much more...

Chemistry Pages: GCSE
Extraction of metals, reaction catalogue.

Learning to Learn
Learning is not instinctive - learn how to learn.

Robert Hooke
England's Leonardo.

Radio Pages
Amateur radio, Army radios of WWII.

Canals 
The Birmingham Canals.

Railways 
The 'Schools' of the SR.

Aircraft Pages
The Boeing 747, the physics of flight, and why a crane fly is like a 747.

Rubaiyat  
of Omar Khayyam

About Rod

Contact

Westminster School

For your extra reading:
Plimer I, 'Heaven and Earth: Global Warming, the Missing Science'. Quartet, 2009.
Delingpole, J: 'The Global Warming Lobby, and the terrier who won't let go.' The Spectator', 31st October 2009, p31.
US Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Minority Staff Report, December 11th 2008 here.


Dr Rod Beavon,   17 Dean’s Yard,   London SW1P 3PB.

Web site content  © JRG Beavon 1997-2009
unless otherwise credited. All rights reserved.

First edition: 18th July 1998. This edition: 8th November 2009.


You don't have to spell sulphur with an f! Read more...

Many of you will have found that exam boards have decided to go along with a recommendation from QCA and the RSC that sulphur should be spelled with an 'f' rather than 'ph', ostensibly to 'avoid confusion'. Who is confused? You don't have to spell it with an -f- ; using the -ph- form is not a mark-deductible offence, in case you were worried.

The defining dictionary for British English is the Oxford English Dictionary - a work of dazzling scholarship by a huge number of people over many decades. I take my authority from that. Sulfur is not listed in the online version; if you type it in you get sulphur. Of course sulfur is given as an alternative (American) form, but the -ph- spelling has been around since at least the 14th century and has been universal since the spelling of British English became standardised several centuries ago.

There are seven towns in America named for element 16: in Louisiana, Oklahoma, Nevada, Texas, Wyoming, Arkansas, and South Dakota. All of them named Sulphur.

Title portraits: Nobel Prize
Winners in Chemistry
1948 - 1954:

1948 Arne Tiselius
1949 William Giaque
1950 Otto Diels
        Kurt Alder
1951 Edwin McMillan
        Glenn Seaborg
1952 Archer Martin
        Richard Synge
1953 Hermann Staudinger
1954 Linus Pauling

Further details are on the Nobel website.
Title bar photos
© Nobel Foundation.
 

Photo Montage:

Robert Hooke memorial window (now destroyed) in St. Helen's Bishopsgate
Schools' Class 'Stowe'
KLM 747-400
Roses in English Canal style
Samuel Morse in youth and old age
Hooke's Law: "as the tension, so the extension"
 

 

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No liability is accepted, however, express or implied, for any consequences arising
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