Andrew Plummer
Andrew Plummer FRCP (1697–1756) was a Scottish physician and chemist. He was professor of chemistry at the University of Edinburgh from 1726 to 1755. He developed ideas on the attractive and repulsive forces involved in chemical affinity, which later had influence on his successors William Cullen and Joseph Black.[1] He compounded "Plummer's pills", a mixture of calomel and antimony sulfide with guaiacum; the pills were originally compounded to treat psoriasis but were used for more than a century as an antisyphilitic.[2]
References
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- ↑ Andrew Plummer – Biography, University of Edinburgh.
- ↑ Richard M. Swiderski, Calomel in America: Mercurial Panacea, War, Song and Ghosts (Universal Publishers, 2008; ISBN 1-59942-467-3), pp. 115-118
- Pages with reference errors
- Use dmy dates from November 2012
- 1697 births
- 1756 deaths
- Members of the Philosophical Society of Edinburgh
- 18th-century Scottish medical doctors
- Scottish physicists
- Academics of the University of Edinburgh
- Alumni of the University of Edinburgh
- Leiden University alumni
- Scottish medical biography stubs
- Scottish scientist stubs
- British chemist stubs