Gadolinite was named in 1800 for
Johan Gadolin, the
Finnish mineralogist-chemist who first isolated an oxide of the
rare-earth element yttrium from the mineral in 1792. The rare earth
gadolinium was also named after him. However, gadolinite does not contain more than trace amounts of gadolinium. When Gadolin analyzed this mineral, he missed an opportunity to discover a second element: the element he thought was
aluminium (alumina) was in fact
beryllium (beryllia), an element that was not officially identified until 1798. Several elements were discovered as a consequence of lengthy analysis and decomposition of the ore gadolinite. As the ore was progressively analysed, the residue was first given the label
ceria, then
lanthana, and subsequently
yttria,
erbia, and
terbia. In order of date discovered, the list of elements includes
cerium,
lanthanum,
erbium,
terbium,
yttrium,
ytterbium,
holmium,
thulium,
scandium,
praseodymium,
neodymium and
dysprosium. Several of these new elements were either discovered or isolated by
Carl Gustaf Mosander in the 1830s and 1840s. ==Uses==