A soft, malleable, ductile, silver-white metallic → chemical element;
symbol La. → atomic number 57;
→ atomic weight 138.9055;
→ melting point about 920°C;
→ boiling point about 3,460°C;
→ specific gravity 6.19 at 25°C;
→ valence +3.
Lanthanum is a member of the → lanthanide group, also called
→ rare-earth elements.
Two naturally occurring → isotopes of lanthanum are known,
139La (more than 99%) and 138La (less than 0.1%).
The → half-life of 138La is 1.1 x 1011
years.
See also: From lanthan- + suffix -um, variant of
→ -ium.
The first component from Gk. lanthanein for “to lie hidden, to
escape notice” because it hid in cerium ore and was difficult to
separate from that rare-earth mineral. It was discovered in the
form lanthanium oxide, called lanthana, by the
Swedish surgeon and chemist Carl-Gustav Mosander (1797-1858) in 1839. Subsequently,
in 1842, Mosander separated his lanthanium sample into two oxides; for one of
these he retained the name lanthanum and for the other he gave the
name didymium (or twin).