Advanced Search (Items only)
ID: 105795
Monsieur Pierre Curie and Madame Marie Curie, courtesy of Scientific American
ID: 105794
Portrait of Antoine Henri Becquerel, experimenter on uranium
ID: 105793
Receptacle in which Madame Curie's radium was handled in the stage next to the last
ID: 105792
Experimenting with radium, circa 1921
ID: 105791
Part of the original radium presented to the American Museum of Natural History in 1903 for the investigations carried on by Dr. George F. Kunz and Dr. Charles Baskerville
ID: 105790
Tube showing 140 grams of powder, illustrating total estimated quantity of high purity radium in the world, of which the Standard Chemical Co. of Pittsburgh produced 72 grams, circa 1921
ID: 105789
Amount of radium in the world with some subdivision (not untraceable) indicated by different colored sands, November, 1921
ID: 105788
Invitation to the presentation to Madame Marie Curie of a gram of radium at the White House, May 20, 1921
ID: 105787
Letter from Hamilton Foley of the Standard Chemical Co. of Pittsburgh, the first company to produce radium commercially, November, 1921
ID: 105786
Transporting Carnotite, the principal ore from which radium is derived, Colorado, August 1921
ID: 105785
Distributing Center for Radium Ore Colorado, circa 1921
ID: 39466
Radium Exhibit, Memorial Hospital cases, August, 1921
ID: 39465
Radium Exhibit preparation and for the visit of Madame Curie, Memorial Hospital cases, August, 1921
ID: 39464
ID: 39463
ID: 39462
Radium Exhibit prepared for the visit of Madame Curie, radium minerals from Westchester County, New York, August, 1921
ID: 326415
Minerals for Atomic Energy, Mineralogy Hall, 1959
ID: 2A23450
The Origin of Life, Invertebrate Hall, 1996
ID: 2A23449
Amino Acids/Proteins, Invertebrate Hall, 1996
ID: 2A1639
Titanium Exhibit, Gem Hall, 1950
ID: 328659
Allied Chemical Company exhibit, Elements in the Universe Distribution and Abundance, Hayden Planetarium, 1962
ID: 319904
Atomic energy exhibit, American Museum of Natural History, 1947
ID: 321285
ID: 36478
The amount of food constituents in egg, Food Conservation Exhibit, American Museum of Natural History, 1917
ID: 36479
Amount of food constituents in prunes, Food Conservation Exhibit, American Museum of Natural History, 1917
ID: 124665
Carving of James Hutton from book
ID: 319869
There is No Monopoly, exhibit panel, Atomic Energy Exhibit, 1947
ID: 319865
Display panel, Atomic Energy Exhibit, 1947
ID: 313807
Prize-winning science project, Contact Process for the Manufacture of Sulphuric Acid, Children's Fair, 1931
ID: 313805
Chemistry in the Office exhibit, Children's Fair, 1931
ID: 319874
Peacetime Uses panel, Atomic Energy Exhibit, 1947