, Pb5(VO4)3Cl. In 1801, while examining mineral samples sent to him by the Purísima del Cardenal mine in
Zimapán in the
State of Hidalgo, del Río arrived at the conclusion that he had found a new metallic element. He prepared various compounds of the element, and observing their diverse colors, he named the element
panchromium (Greek: παγχρώμιο "all colors"). Later, on observing that the compounds changed color to red on heating, he substituted the name
erythronium (Greek: ερυθρός "red"). The following year he gave samples containing the new element to
Alexander von Humboldt, who sent them on to
Hippolyte Victor Collet-Descotils in París for his analysis. Collet-Descotils's analysis found (mistakenly) that the samples contained only
chromium. Humboldt, in turn, rejected del Río's claim of the discovery of a new element, and del Río himself concluded his discovery had been an error. In 1830, 27 years after its initial discovery, Professor
Nils Gabriel Sefström of Sweden rediscovered the element in a sample of iron of Taberg. He gave it its current name,
vanadium, in honor of the Scandinavian goddess of love and beauty,
Vanadis. In the same year,
Friedrich Wöhler, the German chemist who had synthesized
urea, analyzed some of del Río's samples of brown lead ore of Zimapán and demonstrated that Sefström's vanadium and del Rio's erythronium were the same. == Later life ==