The National Historic Chemical Landmarks program was launched by the American Chemical Society in 1992 to recognize significant achievements in the history of chemistry and related professions. The program celebrates the centrality of chemistry. The designation of such generative achievements in the history of chemistry demonstrates how chemists have benefited society by fulfilling the ACS vision: Improving people's lives through the transforming power of chemistry. The program occasionally designates International Historic Chemical Landmarks to commemorate "chemists and chemistry from around the world that have had a major impact in the United States".
List of landmarks
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1999
- Hermann Staudinger's research on macromolecular chemistry at the University of Freiburg between 1926 and 1956
- Synthesis of physostigmine by Percy Lavon Julian at DePauw University in 1935, which made physostigmine readily available for the treatment of glaucoma
- Work of Antoine Lavoisier to elucidate the principles of modern chemistry in the late 1700s
- Synthesis of progesterone by Russell Marker at Pennsylvania State University in 1938 (a process now known as Marker degradation), and the development of the Mexican steroid hormone industry by Syntex S.A. in the 1940s
- Separation of rare earth elements by Charles James at the University of New Hampshire in the early 1900s
- Discovery of polypropylene and development of a new high-density polyethylene by J. Paul Hogan and Robert Banks at Phillips Petroleum Company in 1951
- Discovery of penicillin by Alexander Fleming at St Mary's Hospital, London in 1928, and its large-scale development between 1939 and 1945 at the USDA Northern Regional Research Laboratory, Abbott Laboratories, Lederle Laboratories, Merck & Co., Inc., Chas. Pfizer & Co., Inc., and E.R. Squibb & Sons
2000
2001
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2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
- The Keeling Curve, a record of atmospheric carbon dioxide levels initiated in 1958 by Charles David Keeling of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, with samples taken at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Mauna Loa Observatory in Hilo, Hawaii.
- William Kelly's pneumatic iron refining process, patented in 1857, at the Lyon County Public Library in Eddyville, Kentucky, and at Murray State University in Murray, Kentucky.
- Edwin H. Land's invention of instant photography (also known by the company's name, Polaroid), at the former Polaroid Corporation Laboratory (now owned by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
- The discovery and isolation of phytochrome, a photoreceptive pigment in plants that controls their germination, growth, and flowering. Phytochrome was isolated in 1959 at the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Beltsville Area Research Center in Beltsville, Maryland.
2016
2017
2018
- Plutonium-238 Production for Space Exploration
2019
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