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The case of the poisonous socks : tales from chemistry

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In 1868, The Times reported that poisons contained in dyes were affecting the public's health.

A doctor informed a London magistrate that brilliantly coloured socks had caused severe "constitutional and local complaint" to several of his patients.

In one case, a patient's foot had become so swollen that his boots had to be cut off.

Respected chemist, William Crookes, offered to identify the poison if doctors would send him samples of the deadly socks.

The story of how he solved the mystery gives this book its title and forms the basis of the first chapter.

Written by a respected science historian and established author, this collection of essays contains 42 tales of chemists and their discoveries from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

Other topics covered include: the quirky beliefs of American philanthropist, George Hodgkins; the development of the chemical laboratory since the 1830s, and the career of C.P.

Snow before he became a novelist. Its broad coverage and modern approach makes it of interest to chemists, teachers, historians and laypeople with an interest in science.

Written with a light style and presented in a series of unconnected vignettes the book is easy to dip into at leisure.

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Product Details
Royal Society of Chemistry
1849733244 / 9781849733243
Paperback / softback
12/09/2011
United Kingdom
English
xiv, 348 p. : ill., ports.
23 cm