Coryell (1912–1971) was an American chemist and one of the discoverers of promethium.
In the above table, just two elements are shown by him as having two solid tie lines: yttrium, to La-Ac and to Lu-Ac; and silicon, to Ti-Zr-Hf and to Ge-Sn-Pb.
These days Ti-Zr-Hf-Rf make up group 4 whereas C-Si-Ge-Sn-Pb-Fl make up group 14. Rightly so given group 4 is the first to exhibit characteristic transition metal properties. The solid tie lines Coryell shows between Hf-Th, Ta-Pa, and W-U would now be rendered in broken form.
If his table was mapped to a 32- or 18-column form, group 3 would presumably be shown as bifurcating after Y.
This is consistent with the 1932 Lu periodic table I referred to in the Solving the Löwdin challenge thread, in which the authors said, "La may well have been put in the place occupied by Lu." It’s pleasing to then be able to trace the recurrence of this idea through:
- 1934 Mendeleev’s mosaic table;
- 1952 Coryell;
- 2006 Silberberg’s table;
- 2007 Eric’s Red Book cover;
- 2018 Eric and William Parson’s suggestion re physical, chemical and electronic properties being inconclusive; and
- 2018 Joshi et al. finding that La, Ac, Lu and Lr behaved the same way in Zintl clusters.
René
PS: The circle around indium must be a typo.