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===The last stable metallic elements=== By 1900 three metals with [[atomic number]]s less than lead (#82), the heaviest stable metal, remained to be discovered: elements 71, 72, 75. [[Carl Auer von Welsbach|Von Welsbach]], in 1906, proved that the old ytterbium also contained a new element (#71), which he named ''cassiopeium''. [[Georges Urbain|Urbain]] proved this simultaneously, but his samples were very impure and only contained trace quantities of the new element. Despite this, his chosen name ''[[lutetium]]'' was adopted. In 1908, Ogawa found element 75 in thorianite but assigned it as element 43 instead of 75 and named it ''nipponium''. In 1925 Walter Noddack, Ida Eva Tacke, and Otto Berg announced its separation from gadolinite and gave it the present name, ''[[rhenium]]''. Georges Urbain claimed to have found element 72 in rare-earth residues, while Vladimir Vernadsky independently found it in orthite. Neither claim was confirmed due to World War I, and neither could be confirmed later, as the chemistry they reported does not match that now known for ''hafnium''. After the war, in 1922, Coster and Hevesy found it by X-ray spectroscopic analysis in Norwegian zircon. [[Hafnium]] was thus the last stable element to be discovered, though rhenium was the last to be correctly recognized. <gallery widths="165px" heights="165px"> File:Lutetium sublimed dendritic and 1cm3 cube.jpg|Lutetium, including a 1 cm<sup>3</sup> cube File:Rhenium single crystal bar and 1cm3 cube.jpg|Rhenium, including a 1 cm<sup>3</sup> cube File:Hf-crystal bar.jpg|Hafnium, in the form of a 1.7 kg bar </gallery> By the end of World War II scientists had synthesized four post-uranium elements, all of which are radioactive (unstable) metals: neptunium (in 1940), plutonium (1940β41), and curium and americium (1944), representing elements 93 to 96. The first two of these were eventually found in nature as well. Curium and americium were by-products of the Manhattan project, which produced the world's first atomic bomb in 1945. The bomb was based on the nuclear fission of uranium, a metal first thought to have been discovered nearly 150 years earlier.
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