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(4) Organic Compounds of Arsenic and Antimony (5) Plant Products and Chemical Fertilisers (6) A Text-book of Inorganic Chemistry

Abstract

THE breadth of chemical industry is well exemplified in the works under notice. The three mentioned in the first review (NATURE, September, 12, 1918, p. 21) cover the heavy chemical, the dye, and the edible oil industries, all requiring many millions of capital, employing thousands of workpeople, and affording problems enough for the most exacting critic.

(4) Organic Compounds of Arsenic and Antimony.

By Prof. G. T. Morgan. Pp. xx + 376. (“Monographs on Industrial Chemistry.”) (London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1918.) Price 16s. net.

(5) Plant Products and Chemical Fertilisers.

By S. Hoare Collins. Pp. xvi + 236. (“Industrial Chemistry.”) (London: Baillière, Tindall, and Cox, 1918.) Price 7s. 6d. net.

(6) A Text-book of Inorganic Chemistry.

Edited by Dr. J. N. Friend. Vol. v. Carbon and its Allies. By Dr. R. M. Caven. Pp. xxi + 468. (London: C. Griffin and Co., Ltd., 1917.) Price 15s. net.

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ARMSTRONG, E. (4) Organic Compounds of Arsenic and Antimony (5) Plant Products and Chemical Fertilisers (6) A Text-book of Inorganic Chemistry. Nature 102, 41–42 (1918). https://doi.org/10.1038/102041a0

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