My middle son is given to serial enthusiasms, what others call hobbies. He’s a second lieutenant in the Marine Corps, now in training at Quantico, and spends his weekends rock climbing in Virginia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania. This lends a pleasing symmetry to his life, as one of his longest, most intense obsessions as a boy was rock collecting. His collection is stored in a wooden cabinet in our garage. Rocks were followed by coins, carnivorous plants, the trombone, computers (he built his first at age eleven) and etymology, a pastime still thriving (we killed fifteen minutes last week talking about the word venery).
Michael’s enthusiasm I recall most fondly was his effort, around age ten, to redesign the periodic table of elements. He respected Dmitri Mendeleev, the Russian chemist who
designed the original, but thought he could do better. I remember stacks of
notebook paper covered with the familiar, variously colored boxes but arranged
in unexpected shapes. I still have some of them. If I had to propose a common theme
among Michael’s revised periodic tables and other interests, I would call them efforts to
organize the world for human understanding. I think of him as a sort of
amateur Linnaeus with interests beyond biology.
To celebrate the International Year of the Periodic Table in 2019 (the 150th anniversary of Mendeleev’s creation), the American Chemical Society’s journal C&EN reprinted an article the late Dr. Oliver Sacks had published with them in 2003: “An Essay on Gallium,” which begins: “I don’t really have a favorite element—I love them all. But the first that pops into my mind, at least today, is gallium [Ga, atomic number 31].”
I can't say that I love plutonium (Pu, atomic number 94). Elsewhere, Sacks
said his favorite element was bromine (Br, atomic number 35). He titled his
2001 memoir Uncle Tungsten [W, atomic number 94]: Memories of a
Chemical Boyhood. In the gallium article Sacks writes:
“Why gallium? Not a common element, not one likely to be lying around the house, but one I was introduced to quite early on, by my Uncle Tungsten (as we used to call my Uncle Dave, who owned a tungsten lightbulb factory).”
Sacks gets
around to celebrating Mendeleev: “When I came to learn about the periodic table
and its history, I was intrigued to learn that gallium was the first element to
be predicted by Mendeleyev (he called it ‘eka-aluminum’), and how this
prediction was vindicated, just six years later, helping to convince
Mendeleyev’s critics of the fundamental truth of his periodic law.”
My favorite
element is molybdenum (Mo, atomic number 42). My fondness has nothing to do with its chemical
properties or its use in military armor, aircraft parts, electrical contacts
and industrial motors. I just love saying that double iamb.
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