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Chemical element
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=== Discovery and recognition of various elements === {{For timeline|Discovery of chemical elements}} Ten materials familiar to various prehistoric cultures are now known to be elements: Carbon, copper, [[gold]], iron, lead, mercury, silver, sulfur, [[tin]], and [[zinc]]. Three additional materials now accepted as elements, [[arsenic]], [[antimony]], and [[bismuth]], were recognised as distinct substances before 1500 AD. [[Phosphorus]], [[cobalt]], and [[platinum]] were isolated before 1750. Most of the remaining naturally occurring elements were identified and characterised by 1900, including: * Such now-familiar [[Industry (manufacturing)|industrial]] materials as [[aluminium]], [[silicon]], [[nickel]], [[chromium]], magnesium, and tungsten * Reactive metals such as [[lithium]], [[sodium]], potassium, and [[calcium]] * The [[halogen]]s [[fluorine]], [[chlorine]], [[bromine]], and [[iodine]] * Gases such as hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, helium, [[argon]], and [[neon]] * Most of the [[rare-earth elements]], including [[cerium]], [[lanthanum]], [[gadolinium]], and [[neodymium]] * The more common [[radioactive]] elements, including uranium, thorium, and [[radium]] Elements isolated or produced since 1900 include: * The three remaining undiscovered stable elements: [[hafnium]], [[lutetium]], and [[rhenium]] * [[Plutonium]], which was first produced synthetically in 1940 by [[Glenn T. Seaborg]], but is now also known from a few long-persisting natural occurrences * The three incidentally occurring natural elements ([[neptunium]], promethium, and technetium), which were all first produced synthetically but later discovered in trace amounts in geological samples * Four scarce decay products of uranium or thorium (astatine, francium, [[actinium]], and [[protactinium]]), and * All synthetic [[transuranic]] elements, beginning with [[americium]] and [[curium]]
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