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  1. David Seaborg (born April 22, 1949) is an American evolutionary biologist, peace activist, author and leader in the environmental movement. He serves as director of the World Rainforest Fund, the Seaborg Open Space Fund, and the Greater Lafayette Open Space Fund (a conservancy raising money to purchase open space in the Lamorinda ...

    • Seaborg

      Seaborg may refer to: Glenn T. Seaborg (1912–1999), American...

  2. Glenn Theodore Seaborg (/ ˈ s iː b ɔːr ɡ / SEE-borg; April 19, 1912 – February 25, 1999) was an American chemist whose involvement in the synthesis, discovery and investigation of ten transuranium elements earned him a share of the 1951 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.

  3. Glenn Theodore Seaborg (Ishpeming, Míchigan, 19 de abril de 1912-Lafayette, California, 25 de febrero de 1999) fue un químico atómico y nuclear estadounidense que obtuvo el Premio Nobel de Química en 1951 por sus «descubrimientos en la química de los elementos transuránicos». [1]

  4. David is President and Founder of the World Rainforest Fund, a nonprofit foundation dedicated to saving the earth’s tropical rainforests and biodiversity. He also founded and headed the Seaborg Open Space Fund, named in honor of his father, Glenn T. Seaborg, to raise money and awareness to save open space from development in central Contra ...

  5. Seaborg was the first person to have an element named after him while he was still living. The only other person to have an element named after him while he was still alive was Yuri Oganessian. Keywords: actinide series; Mendeleev 150; periodic system; periodic table; Seaborg. Early life.

    • David Seaborg
    • 2019
  6. 25 de feb. de 1999 · In Berkeley, California, a young chemist named Glenn Seaborg synthesized and isolated a new element unknown in nature -- plutonium -- that made it possible for the United States to produce the first atomic bomb, and bring an end to World War II.