The answer to this question wasn't simply academic and inherently interesting: it also held the promise that if such a system could be found, the existence and nature of hitherto unknown elements could be understood even before they were discovered. It would also help determine what chemists should look for when searching for new elements.
That is, however, until Russian scientist Dmitri Mendeleev cracked nature's code and revealed one of science's most famous taxonomic charts: the periodic table of elements. This is the set of a priori principles that governs, explains and predicts the properties of all elements, sorts them according to a system of increasing weight, and categorizes them according to families of property similarity.
Once this system was in place, it wouldn't take too long for geniuses such as Ernest Rutherford to start understanding the basic structure of atoms. Here is that fascinating story:
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