compare pokemon to the periodic table?

right now Im studying physics for an upcoming test, and I noticed how similar atoms are to pokemon! I mean, they both have a natural occurance rate (lithium 6 has a 12.5% occurance rate, lithium 7 thus has 97.5% occurance rate, like how gyarados has a 100% occurance rate on route 229, and only a 65% occurance rate in resort area!), they both have 'isotopes' in that same species pokemon can have different IVs, just like atoms can have different masses, and they can both be compound differently, like how hydrogen can be in water molecules and in hydrochloric acid molecules, and how pokemon can have different EVs and attack.

I say that's pretty funny.
 
Final form of POKEMON (Male) reacts with final form of POKEMON (Female) in the presence of daycare to produce first form of POKEMON (random gender).
 
in my chem class, we had to make element cards, basically relating 5 different elements 5 related things in a certain topic. i chose lone wolf and cub since i wasnt too focused on pokemon last year, but this year got my friend to do pokemon. i cant remember everything but im pretty sure he used skarmory=iron, deoxys=carbon, mew=iron, and i think he used charizard, and i dont remember the rest. but i do remember i had like, a list of at least 20 pokemon and a correlating element with at least 2 good reasons on how they are related.i should go find that list. sell it to some kid doing his cards next year.
 
Matter isn't created or destroyed when Pokemon breed. A mass of cells grows from nutrients absorbed by the parents.
 
Just posting because this thread reminded me of an element-related team I ran on shoddy:

Drifblim ** Helium
Togekiss ** Oxygen
Gallade ** Gallium
Regirock ** Magnesium
Miltank ** Calcium
Scizor ** Iron

It was pretty fun.
 
Abomasnow = Beryllium
Because it's cold...get it? Burrrrrr-yllium. This is terrible. I apologize to everyone for that.
 
Blissey= AIDS; oh wait, this is elements nevermind.

With my bad puns aside...

Steelix= Lithium. You know.. minerally rocks..
 
Oh, c'mon, pokemon doesn't have anything to do with the periodic table. I mean, by the same token I can say "x" is closely related to athoms, because there are many kinds of "x" they have different traits (sorry I don't know the scientifical accurate words in english).

This reminds me of philosophical nosense discussions.
 
I guess, I am not the best chemic in my school so yeah >_>

especially considering that its spelled chemist.

but i just remembered that Palkias head looks like a CoCl2
anyone else who knows chem will know what i mean.
for all yall who dont know, heres a picture of it when its drawn with the elements.

CoCl2 looks really funny

EDIT:found a better image of what it looks like

it still looks funny.

EDIT 2: also,
(lithium 6 has a 12.5% occurance rate, lithium 7 thus has 97.5% occurance rate,
100-12.5=97.5????
wouldnt lithium 7 have an 87.5% occurence rate?
 
lol.

Too bad there are no liquid pokemon. Except maybe grimer/muk, but that's a stretch. And it's too bad that there's no banana-like pokemon to represent potassium.

Also Arceus is Uranium.

Tropius is practically a banana tree.

And doesn't Vaporeon's dex entry say it can take on a liquid form?
 
Splitting matter into identical copies?

Splitting matter would not make identical copies, due to the conservation of matter. However, scientists can make organic clones (i.e they share identical DNA, just like cloned pokemon share identical stats!) and certain organisms produce asexually in nature, which result in offspring with identical DNA, hence clones.
 
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