Watchtower ONLINE LIBRARY
Watchtower
ONLINE LIBRARY
English
  • BIBLE
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • MEETINGS
  • Did the Elements Come About by Chance?
    Awake!—2000 | October 8
    • Did the Elements Come About by Chance?

      “EVERY object in the Universe, even the most distant star, is made of atoms,” explains The Encyclopedia of Stars & Atoms. Individual atoms are too small to see, but packed together they make up familiar chemical elements. Some of these elements are solids that we can see; others are invisible gases. Can the existence of all such chemical elements be explained by chance?

      Elements 1 to 92

      Though hydrogen is the simplest of all atoms, it fuels stars like our sun and is vital for life. An atom of hydrogen has one proton in its nucleus and one electron moving around that nucleus. Other chemical elements, such as carbon, oxygen, gold, and mercury, are made of atoms with many electrons moving around a nucleus of many protons and neutrons.

      Some 450 years ago, only 12 chemical elements were known. As more were discovered, scientists noticed a natural order to them. And when the elements were placed on a chart in rows and columns, scientists discovered that elements sharing a column had similar characteristics. But there were also gaps in the chart, representing unknown elements. This led Russian scientist Dmitry Mendeleyev to predict the existence of the element with the atomic number 32, germanium, as well as its color, weight, density, and melting point. Mendeleyev’s “prediction about other missing elements—gallium and scandium—also turned out to be very accurate,” notes the 1995 science textbook Chemistry.

      In time, scientists predicted the existence of other unknown elements and some of their characteristics. Eventually all the missing elements were discovered. There are no longer any gaps on the chart. The natural order of elements is based on the number of protons in the nucleus of their atoms, starting with element number 1, hydrogen, and continuing to the last element that generally occurs naturally on earth, number 92, uranium. Is this just a coincidence?

      Consider, too, the rich variety of chemical elements. Gold and mercury are elements with distinctive shining colors. One is a solid, and the other a liquid. Yet, they follow each other as elements 79 and 80. An atom of gold has 79 electrons, 79 protons, and 118 neutrons. An atom of mercury has just one more electron, one more proton, and more or less the same number of neutrons.

      Is it just chance that a slight change in the arrangement of atomic particles yields such a rich variety of elements?

  • Did the Elements Come About by Chance?
    Awake!—2000 | October 8
    • [Chart/Diagram on page 6, 7]

      (For fully formatted text, see publication)

      As of the time of publication, scientists have produced elements 93 and larger, up to and including element 118. Predictably, these elements still fit the pattern of the periodic table.

      [Credit Line]

      Source: Los Alamos National Laboratory

      Name of element Symbol Atomic number (number of protons)

      hydrogen H 1

      helium He 2

      lithium Li 3

      beryllium Be 4

      boron B 5

      carbon C 6

      nitrogen N 7

      oxygen O 8

      fluorine F 9

      neon Ne 10

      sodium Na 11

      magnesium Mg 12

      aluminum Al 13

      silicon Si 14

      phosphorus P 15

      sulfur S 16

      chlorine Cl 17

      argon Ar 18

      potassium K 19

      calcium Ca 20

      scandium Sc 21

      titanium Ti 22

      vanadium V 23

      chromium Cr 24

      manganese Mn 25

      iron Fe 26

      cobalt Co 27

      nickel Ni 28

      copper Cu 29

      zinc Zn 30

      gallium Ga 31

      germanium Ge 32

      arsenic As 33

      selenium Se 34

      bromine Br 35

      krypton Kr 36

      rubidium Rb 37

      strontium Sr 38

      yttrium Y 39

      zirconium Zr 40

      niobium Nb 41

      molybdenum Mo 42

      technetium Tc 43

      ruthenium Ru 44

      rhodium Rh 45

      palladium Pd 46

      silver Ag 47

      cadmium Cd 48

      indium In 49

      tin Sn 50

      antimony Sb 51

      tellurium Te 52

      iodine I 53

      xenon Xe 54

      cesium Cs 55

      barium Ba 56

      lanthanum La 57

      cerium Ce 58

      praseodymium Pr 59

      neodymium Nd 60

      promethium Pm 61

      samarium Sm 62

      europium Eu 63

      gadolinium Gd 64

      terbium Tb 65

      dysprosium Dy 66

      holmium Ho 67

      erbium Er 68

      thulium Tm 69

      ytterbium Yb 70

      lutetium Lu 71

      hafnium Hf 72

      tantalum Ta 73

      tungsten W 74

      rhenium Re 75

      osmium Os 76

      iridium Ir 77

      platinum Pt 78

      gold Au 79

      mercury Hg 80

      thallium Tl 81

      lead Pb 82

      bismuth Bi 83

      polonium Po 84

      astatine At 85

      radon Rn 86

      francium Fr 87

      radium Ra 88

      actinium Ac 89

      thorium Th 90

      protactinium Pa 91

      uranium U 92

      neptunium Np 93

      plutonium Pu 94

      americium Am 95

      curium Cm 96

      berkelium Bk 97

      californium Cf 98

      einsteinium Es 99

      fermium Fm 100

      mendelevium Md 101

      nobelium No 102

      lawrencium Lr 103

      rutherfordium Rf 104

      dubnium Db 105

      seaborgium Sg 106

      bohrium Bh 107

      hassium Hs 108

      meitnerium Mt 109

      110

      111

      112

      114

      116

      118

      [Diagram]

      (For fully formatted text, see publication)

      Do the order and harmony of elements in the periodic table reflect mere chance or intelligent design?

      Helium atom

      Electron

      Proton

      Neutron

English Publications (1950-2026)
Log Out
Log In
  • English
  • Share
  • Preferences
  • Copyright © 2025 Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Settings
  • JW.ORG
  • Log In
Share