Axel Fredrik Cronstedt

Chemist, Academic

1722 – 1765

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Who was Axel Fredrik Cronstedt?

Baron Axel Fredrik Cronstedt was a Swedish mineralogist and chemist who discovered nickel in 1751 as a mining expert with the Bureau of Mines. Cronstedt described it as kupfernickel. This name arises because the ore has a similar appearance to copper and a mischievous sprite was supposed by miners to be the cause of their failure to extract copper from it. He was a pupil of Georg Brandt, the discoverer of cobalt. Cronstedt is one of the founders of modern mineralogy and is described as the founder by John Griffin in his 1827 A Practical Treatise on the Use of the Blowpipe.

Cronstedt also discovered the mineral scheelite in 1751. He named the mineral tungsten, meaning heavy stone in Swedish. Carl Wilhelm Scheele later suggested that a new metal could be extracted from the mineral. In English, this metal is now known as the element tungsten.

In 1753, Cronstedt was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

In 1756, Cronstedt coined the term zeolite after heating the mineral stilbite with a blowpipe flame.

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Born
Dec 23, 1722
Sweden
Nationality
  • Sweden
Profession
Died
Aug 19, 1765
Stockholm

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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