Radium was discovered by Marie Curie, Pierre Curie and Gustave Bemont in 1898, working in France.
France
Radium was discovered in 1898 by Marie Curie, Pierre Curie and Gustave Bemont (France).
The first thing on Earth with working ears. It doesn't take a scientist to hear sound.
Dr. Harry Coover, a scientist working for 3M discovered it in 1942.
Narcan was discovered by Scientist Carrie Anne Krajci Armando while working for the company Wyeth in the late 60's
Marie Curie. Uranium was discovered in 1789 by the German chemist Martin Heinrich Klaproth working in Berlin.
The latest confirmed element discovered was Livermorium, 116Lv, in 2000. Ununseptium is not officially credited as "discovered" by the IUPAC/IUPAP Joint Working Party, but it is the most recently synthesized element, made in 2010.
Alan Graham MacDiarmid ONZ (April 14, 1927 - February 7, 2007) was a chemist, and one of three recipients of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2000.MSU-UTCnians are scientists..neutronista 2009-2010Added:As you have not stated your country it is not possible to say who is a foreign scientist. All scientists who are native to you (born?, working?, living? in your country i.e. where you're born?, working?, living?) are probably 'foreign' to me 'cause I most likely live (or was born or am working) in another country!Anyhow, most scientists are really 'internationals', working in (and for) the world science community and knowledge.
no one invented it, it is a natural phenomenon. Radioactivity was first discovered in 1896 by the French scientist Henri Becquerel, while working on phosphorescent materials.
microorganisms were first discovered 3-4 billion years ago
The spectral line for helium was first discovered by a French astronomer working in India during a solar eclipse. An English astronomer determine that this spectral line was due to a previously unknown element. An Italian physicist first detected helium on Earth. A Scottish chemist, was the first to isolate helium on Earth. So where was helium discovered? Depending on how you define "discovery" it was discovered in India, France, England, Italy or Scotland.
As you have not stated your country it is not possible to say who is a foreign scientist.All scientists who are native to you (born?, working?, living? in your country i.e. where you're born?, working?, living?) are probably 'foreign' to me 'cause I most likely live (or was born or am working) in another country!Anyhow, most scientists are really 'internationals', working in (and for) the world science community and knowledge.