After working at Argo Corn Products, he eventually obtained a professorship at Westmont College in Santa Barbara, California.
[6] In a self-published book, Types of Graphic Representation of the Periodic System of the Elements (1957) he listed some 700 images published since 1862, classified under 146 heads.
[7] He brought out a greatly expanded version in 1974: Graphic Representations of the Periodic System during One Hundred Years.
Mazurs preferred tables based on electronic structure, notably that of Charles Janet and his own modification of it.
[13] His notes and papers are held in the library of the Science History Institute, 315 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106, where they occupy 4 linear feet, and include lantern slides and transparencies of periodic tables which appear in his books.