1621 in science
The year 1621 in science and technology involved some significant events.
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Astronomy
Botany
- The University of Oxford Botanic Garden, the oldest botanical garden in Great Britain, is founded as a physic garden by Henry Danvers, 1st Earl of Danby.[2]
Medicine
- Robert Burton publishes his treatise The Anatomy of Melancholy.
Physics
- Willebrord Snellius formulates Snell's law on refraction.
Technology
- A simple microscope is developed.
- Cornelius Vermuyden begins reclamation of Canvey Island in England.
Births
- January 27 – Thomas Willis, English physician who contributes to knowledge of the nervous and cardiovascular systems (died 1675)
Deaths
- July 2 – Thomas Harriot, English ethnographer, astronomer and mathematician (born c. 1560)
- September 1 – Bahāʾ al-dīn al-ʿĀmilī, Arab philosopher and astronomer (born 1547)
- Jan Jesenius, Slovak physician (born 1566)
gollark: Well, I was talking about the quad'smore'smingot one, which was in fact on whatever CNLite version.
gollark: Was it that insane? I thought we just made redstone from the computer factory's farming area.
gollark: The machines involved in that were all automatically manufactured on the Unicode Consortium main assembler array at basically zero noticeable cost.
gollark: Like the automated quad'smore'smingot machine.
gollark: Many of my cool screenshots are in fact from survival.
References
- "Johannes Schreck-Terrentius Constantiensis: Wissenschaftler und Chinamissionar". HWTG Konstanz.
- "A History of The Gardens". The University of Oxford Botanic Garden. Archived from the original on 2011-07-09. Retrieved 2011-03-15.
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