1687 in science
The year 1687 in science and technology involved some significant events.
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Biology
- Alida Withoos at the house of Agnes Block makes a painting of the first pineapple bred in Europe.
Medicine
- Dutch physician Willem ten Rhijne publishes Verhandelinge van de Asiatise Melaatsheid na een naaukeuriger ondersoek ten dienste van het gemeen in Amsterdam, explaining Asian leprosy to the West.
Physics
- July 5 – Isaac Newton's Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, known as the Principia, is published by the Royal Society of London. In it, Newton describes his theory of universal gravitation, explains the laws of mechanics (including Newton's laws of motion), gives a formula for the speed of sound and demonstrates that Earth is an oblate spheroid. The concepts in the Principia become the foundations of modern physics.
Births
- October 14 – Robert Simson, Scottish mathematician (died 1768).
Deaths
- January 28 – Johannes Hevelius, German astronomer (born 1611).
gollark: Oh, no, it crashed anyway, but later for some reason?
gollark: Anyway, I've been able to figure out that it's apparently because Aidan used `readFileSync` for some reason.
gollark: But only because there aren't *that* many communist countries in the first place.
gollark: I mean, if you compare stock market crash rates to communist country failure rates, I think you'd technically be right, inasmuch as there are more.
gollark: Less frequently than this, at least.
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