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1660 in science
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The year 1660 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Events
- November 28 – At Gresham College in London, twelve men, including Christopher Wren, Robert Boyle, John Wilkins and Robert Moray, meet after a lecture by Wren and resolve to found "a College for the Promoting of Physico-Mathematicall Experimentall Learning", which will become the Royal Society.
Botany
- John Ray publishes Catalogus plantarum circa Cantabrigiam nascentium in Cambridge, the first flora of an English county.
Mathematics
- The popular English-language edition by Isaac Barrow of Euclid's Elements is published in London.
Physics
Zoology
- Jan Goedart begins publication of Metamorphosis Naturalis in Middelburg, Zeeland, containing detailed illustrated descriptions of insect metamorphosis.
Births
- February 19 – Friedrich Hoffmann, German physician and chemist (died 1742)
- April 16 – Hans Sloane, Ulster Scots-born collector and physician (died 1753)
- March 15 – Olof Rudbeck the Younger, Swedish naturalist (died 1740)
- May 27 (bapt.) – Francis Hauksbee, English scientific instrument maker and experimentalist (died 1713)
- approx. date – Edward Lhuyd, Welsh naturalist (died 1709)
- Date unknown – Jeanne Dumée, French astronomer (born 1660)
Deaths
References
References
- (2006). "Penguin Pocket On This Day". Penguin Reference Library.
- Egerton, Frank N.. (October 2005). "A History of the Ecological Sciences, Part 18: John Ray and His Associates Francis Willughby and William Derham". Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America.
- Hooke, Robert. (1678). "Lectures ''De Potentia Restitutiva'', or of Spring. Explaining the Power of Springing Bodies". The Royal Society.
- (2016). "Johannes Goedaert: Fijnschilder en entomoloog". Nehalennia.
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