![]() ![]() In the 2000s TV series Smallville, the S symbol originally appeared as a diamond with a vertical infinity symbol (to be similar to the S), in an attempt to make it seem more alien. In the miniseries Kingdom Come, an aged Superman sported an S-like symbol against a black background in a red pentagon. Not only did the colors and powers change, the logo also evolved into a re-imagined "electric" emblem. The effective material found to create Superman's suit, along with being blue and silver, was also courtesy of Lex Luthor. In 1997's, Superman Vol 2 #123 Superman's new powers forced him to find a suit that was capable of containing his new abilities. ![]() In 1992's 75th edition of Vol 2, the logo is shown soaked in blood, depicting Superman’s death. In the mid-1990s, when Superman's costume and powers changed briefly, during the " Superman Red/Superman Blue" comic book storylines, the shield changed colors and slightly changed shape, in accordance with the changes in the costume. The classic logo is the basis for virtually all other interpretations of the logo. ![]() It has, in most incarnations, retained its original color, while changing shape here and there. Extreme examples of this would be the very large logo on the Dean Cain costume from the television series Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman and the comparatively small version of the shield as depicted in the 2006 film Superman Returns. The S has varied in size and shape and the diamond shape containing it has also changed size and shape. It was black with a red S outlined with white (or occasionally with yellow). The shield first became a diamond in the Fleischer cartoon serial Superman. The shield varied over the first few years of the comics, and many times was nothing more than an inverted triangle with an S inside of it. The symbol was first changed a few issues later in Action Comics #7. In its original inception in Action Comics #1, Superman's symbol was a letter S with red and blue on a yellow police badge symbol that resembled a shield. In earlier Superman stories, the logo was simply an initial for "Superman", but in the 1978 film, it became the family crest of the House of El, the family of Superman. The tradition of wearing a representative symbol on the chest was followed by many subsequent superheroes, including Batman, Green Lantern, the Flash, Wonder Woman, Hawkman, and many others. As a representation of one of the first superheroes, it served as a template for character design decades after Superman's first appearance. We created a timeline of the history of the periodic table.Superman shield, also known as the Superman logo or the Superman symbol, is the iconic emblem for the fictional DC Comics superhero Superman. The Periodic Table has constantly been improved and developed over the past 200 years, but in 1869 Dimitri Mendeleev finished the first version of the periodic table as we know it today, by arranging the elements by atomic mass and leaving spaces open for the elements that were not yet discovered. Who invented the Periodic Table of Elements? The periodic table also gives us an idea of what the characteristics of an element might be and help us predict how an element might react based on in which group it is located. The Periodic Table of Elements can be used as an assisting tool in chemical calculations, when a specification of an element is needed it is easily found in the Periodic Table. How is the Periodic Table of Elements used? The table lists all the elements that are currently known (118), in descending order of the number of protons that are present, in a single atom of the element. The Periodic table of elements is a tool, developed by scientists over hundreds of years. ![]() List of all the elements and their properties: ![]()
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