1738 in science
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
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The year 1738 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Contents
Astronomy
- Pierre Louis Maupertuis publishes Sur la figure de la terre, which confirms Newton's view that the earth is an oblate spheroid slightly flattened at the poles.
Botany
- Publication of Hortus Cliffortianus, a detailed description by Linnaeus of George Clifford's gardens at Hartekamp, Netherlands, including the raising of exotic plants such as bananas in a greenhouse.
Mathematics
- Abraham de Moivre publishes the second English edition of his The Doctrine of Chances containing a study of the coefficients in the binomial expansion of (a + b)n.
Medicine
- February – Great Plague of 1738, an outbreak of bubonic plague, begins to spread from Banat across central Europe.[1]
- Establishment of The Mineral Water Hospital in Bath, England.
Metallurgy
- William Champion of Bristol patents a process to distill zinc from calamine using charcoal in a smelter.
Technology
- Jacques de Vaucanson presents the world's first automaton, The Flute Player (1737) to the French Academy of Sciences.
- Black Forest clockmaker Franz Ketterer produces one of the earliest cuckoo clocks.
Awards
Births
- November 15 – William Herschel, German-born astronomer (died 1822)
Deaths
- June 21 – Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount Townshend, English agriculturalist (born 1674)
- September 23 – Herman Boerhaave, Dutch physician (born 1668)
References
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