Michael Swanwick's Periodic Table of Science Fiction

101

Md

Mendelevium

(258)

The Feast of Saint Mendeleyev

Every year on March 1, chemists around the world celebrate the feast day

of Dimitri Ivanovich Mendeleyev, the Father of the Periodic Table.

Prodigiously intelligent, Mendeleyev was almost denied a university

education by his Siberian birth. Fortunately for science, his determined

mother took him first to Moscow and then to St. Petersburg, where she

finally found a school that would take him. He graduated with a gold

medal for excellence in scholarship and went on to study in Paris and

Heidelberg. As a professor of chemistry, back in St. Petersburg, he could

find no textbook worth teaching and so wrote his own. This led him to

ponder deeply the relationships between elements and how they best might

be organized.

Mendeleyev's breakthrough insight on March 1, 1869 (February 17 in the

old calendar), that the elements should be sorted by their valences, took

an unruly mass of empirical data and turned it into a powerful tool of

analysis and prediction. The importance of the periodic table to

chemistry can be judged by the fact that his earliest version of it had

three gaps where elements should exist but so far as anyone knew did not.

All three of these elements were subsequently detected and found to

possess the properties Mendeleyev had predicted for them.

In keeping with the solemnity of the occasion, the Feast of Saint

Mendeleyev is a day of fasting and abstinence. Not a chemist anywhere in

the world will touch more than a morsel of food or a few sips of water

from sunup to sundown. Their mien is somber. They think serious thoughts.

After dark, of course, that all changes. Out come the picnic baskets and

wine bottles. Toasts are made, and laughter sparkles to the sky. Then

everybody goes outside, and they proceed to blow things up. They're

chemists, after all?it's what they do for fun!

Mendeleyev could have predicted it.

The End

© 2002 by Michael Swanwick and SCIFI.COM.