1. Jacob Forster (1739–1806) and his connections with forsterite and palladium
2. Thorpe , Edward . 1911. Essays in historical chemistry, third edition 578–578. London
3. Composition, a neglected aspect of the chemical revolution
4. See, for example
Thorpe Essays in historical chemistry , third edition London 1911 578 578 An early account which draws on the most important of the papers published during the controversy is A. M. White and H. B. Friedman, ‘On the discovery of palladium’, J. chem. ed., 9 (1932), 236–245. A later discussion which covers much of the same ground as White, but with added emphasis on the role played by Chenevix, is Desmond Reilly, ‘Richard Chenevix (1774–1839) and the discovery of palladium’, J. chem. ed., 32 (1955), 37–39. A more recent treatment is available in an unpublished thesis by D. C. Goodman, ‘William Hyde Wollaston and his influence on early nineteenth-century science’ (D.Phil. Thesis, University of Oxford, 1965), 132–143.