Abstract
AS the Society is aware, the first table, containing the relative weights of the ultimate particles of gaseous and other bodies, was published as the eighth and last paragraph to a paper by Dalton on the absorption of gases by water and other liquids, read before this Society on Oct. 21, 1803, but not printed until the year 1805. There appears reason to believe that these numbers were obtained by Dalton after the date at which the paper was read, and that the paragraph in question was inserted at the time the paper was printed. The remarkable words with which he introduces this great principle give us but little clue to the methods which he employed for the determination of these first chemical constants, whilst in no subsequent publication, as in none of the papers which have come to light since his death, do we find any detailed explanation of how these actual numbers were arrived at. He says,† “I am nearly persuaded that the circumstance”(viz., that of the dliferent solubilities of gases in water) “depends upon the weight and number of the ultimate particles of the several gases: those whose particles are lightest and single being less absorbable, and the others more, according as they increase in weight and complexity. An inquiry into the relative weights of the ultimate particles of bodies is a subject, as far as I know, entirely new. I have been lately prosecuting this inquiry with remarkable success. The principle cannot be entered upon in this paper; but I shall just subjoin the results, as far as they appear to be ascertained by my experiments.”
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SOME REMARKS ON DALTON'S FIRST TABLE OF ATOMIC WEIGHTS * . Nature 11, 52–54 (1874). https://doi.org/10.1038/011052a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/011052a0