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1870 in science
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The year 1870 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
Biology
- January 18 – Gerhardt Krefft first describes the Queensland lungfish, in The Sydney Morning Herald.
- Charles Valentine Riley confirms Phylloxera as the cause of the Great French Wine Blight.[1]
- Heinrich Wilhelm Gottfried von Waldeyer-Hartz postulates that the number of ova in the female is fixed.
Chemistry
- Norman Lockyer and Edward Frankland propose that the gas detected in solar observations should be called 'helium'.[2][3]
Mathematics
- Felix Klein constructs a model for hyperbolic geometry establishing its self-consistency and the logical independence of Euclid's fifth postulate. (Note: Eugenio Beltrami had previously given such a model in 1868.)
- W. Stanley Jevons publishes the popular textbook Elementary Lessons on Logic.[4]
Medicine
- Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch establish the germ theory of disease.
- Henry Maudsley publishes his lectures on Body and Mind: an Inquiry into their Connection and Mutual Influence.
- Frances Morgan becomes the first British woman to receive a Doctor of Medicine degree from a European university, the University of Zurich.
Meteorology
- November 1 – In the United States, the newly created Weather Bureau (later renamed the National Weather Service) makes its first official meteorological forecast: "High winds at Chicago and Milwaukee... and along the Lakes".
Paleontology
- Eustreptospondylus oxoniensis juvenile dinosaur fossil found in Summertown, Oxford.[5]
Physics
- Rudolf Clausius proves the scalar virial theorem.
Psychology
- Ludimar Hermann observes the Hermann grid illusion.[6]
Technology
- February 26 – The Beach Pneumatic Transit subway in New York City is opened.
- March 8 – Joy valve gear for steam locomotives is patented in the United Kingdom by David Joy.
- August 2 – Official opening of the Tower Subway beneath the River Thames in London, first use of the cylindrical wrought iron tunnelling shield devised by Peter W. Barlow and James Henry Greathead[7] and of a permanent tunnel lining of cast iron segments.[8]
- Svend Foyn receives a Norwegian patent for the grenade harpoon cannon for whaling.
- Henry R. Heyl receives a United States patent for a magic lantern movie projector.
- A practical stock ticker is introduced by Thomas Edison.
- First known use of weapons for anti-aircraft warfare, at Paris during the Franco-Prussian War.
Institutions
- Ellen Swallow Richards becomes the first woman admitted to study at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
- December 20 – Missouri University of Science and Technology established as the Missouri School of Mines and Metallurgy.
Awards
Births
- January 9 – Joseph Strauss (died 1938), American bridge engineer.
- January 13 – Ross Granville Harrison (died 1959), American physiologist.
- February 7 – Alfred Adler (died 1937), Austrian psychotherapist.
- March 17 – Horace Donisthorpe (died 1951), English entomologist.
- May 20 – Arthur Korn (died 1945), German inventor.
- May 27 – Anna Stecksén (died 1904), Swedish scientist, physician and pathologist.
- June 21 – Clara Immerwahr (suicide 1915), German chemist.
- August 25 – Mihran Kassabian (died 1910), American radiologist.
- October 23 – George Newman (died 1948), English public health physician.
Deaths
- January 25 – Janet Taylor (born 1804), English mathematician and navigational instrument maker.
- March 9 – 'Granny' Maria Ann Smith (born 1799), English-born Australian horticulturalist.
- March 12 – Charles Xavier Thomas (born 1785), French inventor of the first mass-produced calculator.
- July 12 – Alexander Henry Haliday (born 1806), Anglo Irish entomologist.
- November 14 – Karl Weltzien (born 1813), German inorganic chemist.
- December 27 (O.S. December 15) – Nikolai N. Kaufman (born 1834), Russian botanist.
References
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