Periodic table found in St Andrews University thought to be world's oldest
The teaching chart dating from around 1885 was discovered during a laboratory clear-out.
A periodic table uncovered during a laboratory clear-out at St Andrews University is believed to be the oldest in the world.
The teaching chart dating from around 1885 was discovered in the chemistry department.
Work has been undertaken to authenticate and preserve the large, fragile chart after it was found among old equipment in 2014.
Dmitri Mendeleev made his famous disclosure on periodicity in 1869, and the St Andrews chart bears an inscription identifying a scientific printer who operated in Vienna between 1875 and 1888.
Professor Eric Scerri from the University of California has dated the table to between 1879 and 1886.
Gallium and scandium, discovered in 1875 and 1879 respectively, are present but germanium, discovered in 1886, is not.
The university said no earlier lecture chart of the table appears to exist.
Professor David O'Hagan, former head of chemistry at St Andrews, said: “The discovery of the world's oldest classroom periodic table at the University of St Andrews is remarkable.
“The table will be available for research and display at the university and we have a number of events planned in 2019, which has been designated international year of the periodic table by the United Nations, to coincide with the 150th anniversary of the table's creation by Dmitri Mendeleev.”
The university was awarded a funding grant from the National Manuscripts Conservation Trust for the conservation of the chart.
A full-size facsimile is now on display in the School of Chemistry, while the original periodic table is being kept in climate-controlled conditions.