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Science history: Marie Curie discovers a strange radioactive substance that would eventually kill her — Dec. 26, 1898

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QUICK FACTS

Milestone: Discovery of radium and polonium

Date: Dec. 26, 1898

Where: Paris

Who: Marie and Pierre Curie, Gustave Bémont

On this day, chemists discovered a substance 900 times more radioactive than uranium. Their research led to unprecedented medical breakthroughs and worldwide fame — but it would also kill one of them.

Marie Curie was a medical student at the Sorbonne, a university in Paris, when she decided to study the new field of radiation for her thesis. In 1895, Wilhelm Röntgen discovered powerful “Röntgen rays,” which would eventually be dubbed X-rays. The following year, Henri Becquerel accidentally discovered much weaker rays emitted by uranium salts would fog up photographic plates just like light rays did — even in the absence of light.

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