User:Salamakajakawaka/sandbox 2

These are my main sources for Kevin and my article on IUPAC. We changed our topic from zinc permanganate to this because there was a lack of information to make an article substantial enough for us both to work on. IUPAC is the largest chemistry organization in the world. Their biggest accomplishments include the official periodic table and nomenclature. The current article is only a small paragraph and hasn't even been reviewed as a stub. There is significant talk on the talk page, but much of it seems relatively off-topic.

There is also an IUPAC naming article, but that doesn't really have any useful information as to how naming works. I'm not really sure how it got a C class rating.

Brown, Theodore L., Eugene H. LeMay Jr., and Bruce E. Bursten. Chemistry The Central Science. 10th Ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, 2006. 50-75. Print.

This source explains the periodic table in depth. I will only include information with how it pertains to the IUPAC organization. Also it has information on inorganic naming

"IUPAC." International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. 08 02 2010. IUPAC, Web. 9 Feb 2010. .

This is their official site and has everything from history to current projects on it.

"IUPAC Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry." Advanced Chemistry Development Inc.. 01 001 	1997. Advanced Chemistry Development Inc., Web. 9 Feb 2010. .

This has more information on Organic naming. Klein, David R. Organic Chemistry I as a second language. 2nd ed. Danvers, MA: John Wiley & Sons inc., 2008. Print.

This book is very ind epth on organic chemistry IUPAC naming.

Klein, David R. Organic Chemistry 2 as a second language. 1st ed. Danvers, MA: John Wiley & Sons inc., 2006. Print.

This book gives more depth on Organic IUPAC naming.