Thomas Thomson

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For similar names, see Thomas Thompson.

Thomas Thomson (April 12, 1773 - July 2, 1852) was a Scottish chemist.

Born Crieff, Perthshire, he was educated at the University of St. Andrews in classics, mathematics and natural philosophy. He went on to graduate in medicine from the University of Edinburgh in 1799. However, he was inspired by Joseph Black to take up chemistry.

In 1796, he succeeded his brother James as assistant editor of the Supplement to the Third Edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica, contributing the articles Chemistry, Mineralogy, and Vegetable, animal and dyeing substances. In 1820, he used these articles as the basis of his book System of Chemistry.

He dabbled in publishing, acted as a consultant to the Scottish excise board, invented the instrument known as Allan's saccharometer and opposed the geological theories of James Hutton, founding the Wernerian Natural History Society of Edinburgh as a platform in 1808.

In 1817, Thomson became regius professor of chemistry at the University of Glasgow.

In 1820, he identified a new zeolite mineral, which we named thomsonite in his honor.

[edit] Honours

[edit] Bibliography

  • (1857) "Biographical notice of the late Thomas Thomson", Glasgow Medical Journal, 5, 69–80, 121–53
  • Crum, W. (1855) "Sketch of the life and labours of Dr Thomas Thomson", Proceedings of the Philosophical Society of Glasgow, 3, 250–64
  • Thomson, R.D. (1852–3) "Memoir of the late Dr Thomas Thomson", Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, 54, 86–98
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