1758 in science
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
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The year 1758 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Astronomy
- Comet Halley reappears as predicted by Edmond Halley in 1705.
Medicine
- Angélique du Coudray demonstrates the first obstetric mannequin.
- Scottish physician Francis Home makes the first attempt to deliver a measles vaccine.[1][2]
Physics
- Ruđer Bošković publishes his atomic theory in Philosophiæ naturalis theoria redacta ad unicam legem virium in natura existentium ("Theory of natural philosophy reduced to one law of the forces existing in nature").[3]
- John Dolland presents his "Account of some experiments concerning the different refrangibility of light" (Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society (London)) describing the discovery of a means of constructing doublet achromatic lenses by the combination of crown and flint glasses, reducing chromatic aberration.[4]
Zoology
- Carl Linnaeus applies his binomial system to animal classification in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae.
Awards
Births
- January 20 – Marie-Anne Pierrette Paulze, French chemist (died 1836)
- March 9 – Franz Joseph Gall, German-born neuroanatomist (died 1828)
- June 29 – Clotilde Tambroni, Italian philologist and linguist (died 1817)
- October 11 – Heinrich Wilhelm Matthäus Olbers, German astronomer (died 1840)
Deaths
- January 18 – François Nicole, French mathematician (born 1683)
- April 22 – Antoine de Jussieu, French naturalist (born 1686)
- August 15 – Pierre Bouguer, French mathematician (born 1698)
- September 5 (NS) – Dmitry Ivanovich Vinogradov, Russian chemist (born c. 1720)
- October – Elizabeth Blackwell, British botanical illustrator (born 1707)
References
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