Discovery of chemical elements

The discoveries of the 118 chemical elements known to exist as of 2025 are presented here in chronological order.

Each element's name, atomic number, year of first report, name of the discoverer, and notes related to the discovery are listed.

For 18th-century discoveries, around the time that Antoine Lavoisier first questioned the phlogiston theory, the recognition of a new "earth" has been regarded as being equivalent to the discovery of a new element (as was the general practice then).

For some elements (e.g. Be, B, Na, Mg, Al, Si, K, Ca, Mn, Co, Ni, Zr, Mo),[51] this presents further difficulties as their compounds were widely known since medieval or even ancient times, even though the elements themselves were not.

Since the true nature of those compounds was sometimes only gradually discovered, it is sometimes very difficult to name one specific discoverer.

The diagram shows a quasi-linear rate of element discoveries from around 1750 to 2023. The invention of periodic table by Mendeleev is shown for reference in 1869, when about 50% of elements (up to period 7) had already been discovered.
Cumulative diagram of element discoveries