Frank Wigglesworth Clarke photograph

Frank Wigglesworth Clarke

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Gender Male
Death93 years ago
Date of birth March 19,1847
Zodiac sign Pisces
Born Boston
Massachusetts
United States
Date of died May 23,1931
DiedChevy Chase
Maryland
United States
Children Una Hunt
Education BLS (Boston Latin School)
The English High School
Boston Latin School (BLS)
Harvard John A. Paulson School Of Engineering And Applied Sciences
Field Geochemistry
Edited worksReport of Work Done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics Mainly During the Fiscal Year 1890-'91
Citations 3,957
AffiliationsSmithsonian Institution
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1462357

The Data of Geochemistry
Evolution and the Spectroscope
The Constants of Nature
The inorganic constituents of marine invertebrates
The Elements of Chemistry
A Recalculation of the Atomic Weights
Scientific Dabblers
The Present Status of Mineralogy
Science in Politics
Are the Elements Elementary?
Laboratory Endowment
Specific gravities, boiling points, and melting points
The Higher Education
A Hundred Years of Chemistry I and II
The Advantages of Ignorance
The Man of Science in Practical Affairs
A table of specific gravity for solids and liquids
Scientific Courses of Study
American Colleges Versus American Science
The Appointment of College Officers
The Data Of Geochemistry, Issues 694-695
Specimens of Educational Literature
The Relations of Abstract Research to Practical Invention
A Preliminary Study of Chemical Denudation: By Frank Wigglesworth Clarke
Analyses of Rocks and Minerals from the Laboratory of the United States Geological Survey, from 1880-1914
Report of Work Done in the Division of Chemistry and Physics Mainly During the Fiscal Year 1890-'91
A Future in Chemistry: Your Options at 14-16
Tables of expansion by heat for solids and liquids
A table of specific heats for solids and liquids
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Frank Wigglesworth Clarke Life story


Frank Wigglesworth Clarke of Boston, Massachusetts, and Washington, D.C. was an American scientist and chemist. Sometimes known as the "Father of Geochemistry," Clarke is credited with determining the composition of the Earth's crust. He was a founder of The American Chemical Society and served as its President, 1901.

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