There remain by the early 1920s a …

Years: 1923 - 1923
There remain by the early 1920s a few blank spots in the periodic table between hydrogen and uranium: elements 43, 61, 72, 85, and 87.

French physicist Maurice, duc de Broglie, has observed faint spectral lines which almost correspond to those predicted by Niels Bohr for element 72, but his attempts to increase the concentration to verify this are thwarted as he is working with rare earth residues.

Bohr predicts that element 72 will not be a member of the rare earths, or lanthanides, but will instead be related to zirconium.

Dutch physicist Dirk Coster and Hungarian-Swedish chemist György Charles de Hevesy, investigating zirconium minerals in 1923 at Bohr's suggestion, discover a new element in Norwegian and Greenland zircons by analyzing their X-ray spectra.

They name the new element hafnium, after Hafnia, the name, in New Latin, for Copenhagen, the city in which it is discovered.

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