Because Alfred Nobel was a known chemist (inventor of dynamite), philanthropist and creator of the Nobel Prize.
Seaborgium is named for Glenn Theodore Seaborg (b. 1912), Swedish chemist and recipient of the 1951 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for chemical discoveries related to transuranium elements.
Nobelium (No, 102)Named after Alfred Nobel, inventor of dynamite and founder of the Nobel Prize
Oxygen was first discovered by Swedish pharmacist Carl Wilhelm Scheele.
Acetaldehyde was discovered in 1774. It was a Swedish chemist and pharmacist named Carl Wilhelm Scheele who first discovered the chemical compound.
It was named the Nobel Prize after Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel, inventor of dynamite. It was named after him because his will established them in 1895.
The Nobel Peace Prize is named after Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite and the founder of the Nobel Prizes. In his will, Nobel specified that a prize be awarded to the person or organization that has done the most or best work for fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the promotion of peace congresses.
It was established in 1432 by a chemist named JonQuor Moiselle.
Because Alfred Nobel was a known chemist (inventor of dynamite), philanthropist and creator of the Nobel Prize.
Alfred Nobel, a Swedish chemical engineer and founder of Nobel Prize.
Seaborgium is named for Glenn Theodore Seaborg (b. 1912), Swedish chemist and recipient of the 1951 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for chemical discoveries related to transuranium elements.
I think you may be referring to the Nobel Prize, which is an international award given in various categories, such as peace, literature, and science, to recognize outstanding achievements. The Nobel Prizes were established by the will of Alfred Nobel, a Swedish inventor and philanthropist, in 1895.
Alfred Nobel... the inventor of dynamite.
he was named for the nobel PEACE prize
Nitroglycerin
A man actually won the 11th Nobel Prize in Literature. It was given to Maurice Maeterlinck, a Belgian author, in 1911. Two years previous, it was given to a woman named Selma Lagerlof, a Swedish children's book writer.
It was discovered by a Swedish chemist named Georg Brandt in 1735