1711 in science
The year 1711 in science and technology involved some significant events.
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Biology
- Luigi Ferdinando Marsigli shows that coral is an animal rather than a plant as previously thought.
Mathematics
- Giovanni Ceva publishes De Re Nummeraria (Concerning Money Matters), one of the first books on mathematical economics.
- John Keill, writing in the journal of the Royal Society and with Isaac Newton's presumed blessing, accuses Gottfried Leibniz of having plagiarized Newton's calculus, formally starting the Leibniz and Newton calculus controversy.
Technology
- John Shore invents the tuning fork
Births
- May 18 – Ruđer Bošković, Ragusan polymath (died 1787)
- July 22 – Georg Wilhelm Richmann, Russian physicist (died 1753)
- September 22 – Thomas Wright, English astronomer, mathematician, instrument maker, architect, garden designer, antiquary and genealogist (died 1786)
- October 31 – Laura Bassi, Italian scientist (died 1778)
- November 19 – Mikhail Lomonosov, Russian scientist (died 1765)
gollark: I don't use EIO now because I disagree with the changes it made in the 1.12 update.
gollark: Ferroboron can't be made in an induction smelter, oddly.
gollark: I don't want tiny compact-machine-fitting things (well, I kind of do, but separate to giant, awe-inspiring ones incorporating fusion plasma injectors of death, hopefully), I want giant ones requiring huge amounts of infrastructure to support it, with cool visual effects, massive (actually fitting, you know, a *fusion* reactor) power output (ideally via steam turbines), that sort of thing.
gollark: Also, I hope the new fusion reactors take inspiration from ReactorCraft.
gollark: The mekanism ones are a bit crazy. If you want oxygen, feeding the separator RF from its own hydrogen run through a gas-burning generator, *it works fine*.
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