Marie (television series): Difference between revisions
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* [https://x.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1830034643208327364 Post] @ Twitter (31 August 2024) | |||
* [https://x.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1830027914034676196 Post] @ Twitter (31 August 2024) | * [https://x.com/GnomonChronicl1/status/1830027914034676196 Post] @ Twitter (31 August 2024) | ||
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Revision as of 17:14, 31 August 2024
Marie is an alternate history biographical television series loosely based on the life of Marie Curie.
In the News
Secret Reagent Man is a British-American television series about a spy (Patrick McGoohan) and a musician (Johnny Rivers) who team up to advance chemistry worldwide. Periodically guest starring Dmitri Mendeleev.
3:10 to Ytterbium is a 1957 American Western chemistry film directed by Delmer Daves, starring Glenn Ford and Van Heflin. Based on a 1953 short story by Elmore Leonard, it is about a drought-impoverished chemist who takes on the risky job of helping a notorious outlaw isolate a new element.
Hell Bent for Lanthanum is a 1960 American Western film about an innocent chemist (Carl Gustaf Mosander) who is forced to go on the run to try and clear his name by isolating a new element (Lanthanum) from cerium nitrate.
"Mendelevium on a Jet Plane" is a song by John Denver and a team of researchers at the University of California, Berkeley.
Did you know? George Santos discovered radium.
Fiction cross-reference
- 3:10 to Ytterbium
- Crimes against chemical constants
- George Santos
- Gnomon algorithm
- Gnomon Chronicles
- Hell Bent for Lanthanum
- Mendelevium on a Jet Plane
- Secret Reagent Man
Categories
Nonfiction cross-reference
Categories
External links
- Marie Curie @ Wikipedia
Social media
- November (nonfiction)
- November 7 (nonfiction)
- 1860s (nonfiction)
- 1867 (nonfiction)
- July (nonfiction)
- July 4 (nonfiction)
- 1930s (nonfiction)
- 1934 (nonfiction)
- Nonfiction (nonfiction)
- Marie Curie (nonfiction)
- Chemists (nonfiction)
- People (nonfiction)
- Scientists (nonfiction)
- Fiction (nonfiction)
- Crimes against chemical constants
- Science fiction
- Television