Gottfried Osann
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Gottfried Wilhelm Osann (26 October 1797 – 9 September 1866) was a German-Russian chemist. He is known for his work on the chemistry of platinum metals.
He studied natural sciences and became a privatdozent in physics and chemistry at the University of Erlangen in 1819. Between 1821 and 1823 he occupied the same position at the University of Jena. He taught chemistry and medicine at the University of Tartu in Estonia from 1823 to 1828.
A collaboration with Jöns Jakob Berzelius nearly lead to the discovery of ruthenium in 1828. They dissolved platinum ore from the Ural mountains in aqua regia and sifted through the residue. Where Berzelius found nothing, Osann thought he'd detected three new metals and named them pluranium (concatenation of platina and Ural), ruthenium (after the latin name for Russia) and polinium (from the Greek word polia, meaning greyhaired, for its residue color). Unfortunately the quantity of the metals was too small to isolate. It was up to the Russian chemist Karl Klaus to verify their existence, which he did in 1844 by isolating measurable quantities of ruthenium. For this reason Klaus is often named as the discoverer of ruthenium rather than Osann.