Adair Crawford

Drawing of some of Adair Crawford's equipment

Adair Crawford FRS FRSE (1748 – 29 July 1795[1]), a chemist and physician, was a pioneer in the development of calorimetric methods for measuring the specific heat capacity of substances and the heat of chemical reactions. In his influential 1779 book "Experiments and Observations on Animal Heat", Crawford presented new experiments proving that respiratory gas exchange in animals is a combustion (two years after Antoine Lavoisier's influential "On combustion in general"). Crawford also was involved in the discovery of the element strontium.

  1. ^ "holmesacourt.org". Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 13 February 2022.

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