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1887 in science
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The year 1887 in science and technology involved many significant events, listed below.
Astronomy
- April – Carte du Ciel project initiated by Paris Observatory director Amédée Mouchez.
- Theodor von Oppolzer's Canon der Finsternisse, a compilation of the 8,000 solar and 5,200 lunar eclipses from 1200 BC until 2161 AD, is published posthumously.
Biology
- Jean Pierre Mégnin publishes Faune des Tombeaux ("Fauna of the Tombs"), the founding work of modern forensic entomology.
- Sergei Winogradsky discovers the first known form of lithotrophy during his research with Beggiatoa.
- The Petri dish is created by German bacteriologist Julius Richard Petri.
Chemistry
- Amphetamine is first synthesized in Germany by Romanian chemist Lazăr Edeleanu, who names it phenylisopropylamine.
- Otto Schott produces 'Normalthermometerglas' (family of Borosilicate glass) for the first time.
Cartography
- Guyou hemisphere-in-a-square projection developed by Émile Guyou.
Climate
- January 28 – In a snowstorm at Fort Keogh, Montana, in the United States, the largest snowflakes on record are reported. They are 15 inches (38 cm) wide and 8 inches (20 cm) thick.
- September 28 – Start of the Yellow River floods in China: 900,000 dead.
Conservation
- June 23 – The Rocky Mountains Park Act becomes law in Canada, creating that nation's first national park, Banff National Park.
Earth sciences
- February 23 – The French Riviera is hit by a large earthquake, killing around 2,000 along the coast of the Mediterranean Sea.
- In Hawaii, the Mauna Loa volcano eruptions subside, having begun in 1843. During the 1887 eruption, about 2½ million tons (2.3 million metric tons) of lava per hour pours out, covering an area of 29 km2.
Linguistics

- March 3 – Anne Sullivan begins to teach language to the deaf and blind Helen Keller.
- July 26 – L. L. Zamenhof publishes Lingvo internacia ("International language") under the pseudonym "Doktoro Esperanto".
Mathematics
- Joseph Louis François Bertrand rediscovers Bertrand's ballot theorem.
- Henri Poincaré provides a solution to the three-body problem.
- The Schröder–Bernstein theorem in set theory is first published by Georg Cantor (without proof) and (on July 11) first proved by Richard Dedekind (without publication).
Medicine
- January 11 – Louis Pasteur's anti-rabies treatment is defended in the French Academy of Medicine by Dr. Joseph Grancher.
- August – The U.S. National Institutes of Health is founded at the Marine Hospital, Staten Island, NY, as the Laboratory of Hygiene.
- October 1 – Hong Kong College of Medicine for Chinese founded by Patrick Manson.
- Paediatrician Samuel Gee gives the first modern-day description of coeliac disease in children in a lecture at Great Ormond Street Hospital for sick children in London.
- Surgeon Franz König publishes "Über freie Körper in den Gelenken" in the journal Deutsche Zeitschrift für Chirurgie, first describing (and naming) the disease Osteochondritis dissecans.
- The Hospitals Association establishes the first (non-statutory and voluntary) register of nurses in the United Kingdom.
Physics

- November – The Michelson–Morley experiment is performed, indicating that the speed of light is independent of motion.
- Heinrich Hertz discovers the photoelectric effect on the production and reception of electromagnetic waves in radio, an important step towards the understanding of the quantum nature of light.
Psychology
- November – G. Stanley Hall founds The American Journal of Psychology.
- Richard Hodgson and S. J. Davey, in the course of investigations into popular belief in parapsychology, publish one of the first descriptions of eyewitness unreliability.
Technology
- March 8 – Everett Horton of Connecticut patents a fishing rod of telescoping steel tubes.
- March 13 – Chester Greenwood patents earmuffs.
- June 8 – Herman Hollerith receives a U.S. patent for his punched card calculator.
- July – James Blyth operates the first working wind turbine at Marykirk in Scotland.
- July 19 – Dorr Eugene Felt receives the first U.S. patent for his comptometer.
- August – Anna Connelly patents a fire escape.
- October 18 – Jacob Fitzgerald and William H. Silver are granted a U.S. patent for a "potato masher and fruit crusher", a form of potato ricer.
- November 8 – Emile Berliner is granted a U.S. patent for his Gramophone.
- Adolf Gaston Eugen Fick invents the contact lens, made of a type of brown glass.
- English engineer James Atkinson invents his "Cycle Engine".
- Mexican general Manuel Mondragón patents the Mondragón rifle, the world's first automatic rifle.
- Alfred Yarrow completes the first practical high-pressure water-tube Yarrow boiler, for a torpedo boat.
Organizations
- March 7 – North Carolina State University is established as North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts.
- October 3 – Florida A&M University opens its doors in Tallahassee, Florida.
Publications
- Publication in Barcelona of Enrique Gaspar's El anacronópete, the first work of fiction to feature a time machine.
Awards
- June – William Armstrong created 1st Baron Armstrong of Cragside, the first engineer to be raised to the Peerage of the United Kingdom
- Copley Medal: Joseph Dalton Hooker
- Wollaston Medal for Geology: John Whitaker Hulke
Births
- January 7 – Kurt Schneider (died 1967), German psychiatrist.
- January 15 – Henry Fairfield Osborn, Jr. (died 1969), American conservationist.
- January 28 – Edmund Jaeger (died 1983), American naturalist.
- April 20 – Margaret Newton (died 1971), Canadian plant pathologist.
- June 22 – Julian Huxley (died 1975), English biologist and populariser of science.
- July 30 – Felix Andries Vening Meinesz (died 1966), Dutch geophysicist.
- August 18 – Erwin Schrödinger (died 1961), Austrian physicist.
- September 26 – Barnes Wallis (died 1979), English aeronautical engineer.
- October 11 – María Teresa Ferrari (died 1956), Argentine physician.
- November 10 – Elisa Leonida Zamfirescu (died 1973), Romanian engineer.
- November 19 – James B. Sumner (died 1955), American winner of the 1946 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
- November 23 – Henry Moseley (killed 1915), English physicist.
- November 25 (November 13 Old Style) – Nikolai Vavilov (died 1943), Russian plant pathologist.
- December 13 – George Pólya (died 1985), Hungarian mathematician.
- December 22 – Srinivasa Ramanujan (died 1920), Indian mathematician.
- December 27 – Edward Andrade (died 1971), English physicist.
Deaths
- January 22 – Joseph Whitworth (born 1803), English mechanical engineer.
- February 26 – Anandi Gopal Joshi (born 1865), Indian physician.
- July 17 – Henry William Ravenel (born 1814), American botanist.
- July 18 – Dorothea Dix (born 1802), American mental health reformer.
- August 2 – Joseph-Louis Lambot (born 1814), French inventor of ferrocement.
- August 15 – Julius von Haast (born 1824), German geologist.
- August 19
- October 7 (O.S. September 25) – Lev Tsenkovsky (born 1822), Russian biologist.
- October 17 – Gustav Kirchhoff (born 1824), German physicist.
- November 18 – Gustav Fechner (born 1801), German psychologist.
References
References
- Donald H. Menzel]] and English translation of the introduction by [[Owen Gingerich]], New York: Dover Publications, 1962.
- (2004). "The history of forensic entomology in German-speaking countries". Forensic Science International.
- Winogradsky, S.. (1887). "Über Schwefelbakterien". Botanische Zeitung.
- Snyder, John P.. (1993). "Flattening the Earth". University of Chicago.
- "Largest snowflake".
- "Canada Creates National Park". [[Parks Canada]].
- (2009). "Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World". Elsevier.
- Feller, William. (1968). "An Introduction to Probability Theory and its Applications". Wiley.
- Cantor, Georg. (1887). "Mitteilungen zur Lehre vom Transfiniten". [[Zeitschrift für Philosophie und philosophische Kritik]].
- Dedekind, Richard. (1932). "Gesammelte mathematische Werke". Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn.
- (2006). "History & Development". The University of Hong Kong Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine.
- Gee, S. J.. (1888). "On the Cœliac Affection". St Bartholomew's Hospital Report.
- Losowsky, M. S.. (2008). "A History of Coeliac Disease". Digestive Diseases.
- "The Possibilities of Malobservation and Lapse of Memory from a Practical Point of View". ''Proceedings of the [[Society for Psychical Research]]'' '''4''' ([https://archive.org/details/proceedingssoci02britgoog Internetversion]).
- Price, Trevor J.. (2004). "Blyth, James (1839–1906)". Oxford University Press.
- Hardy, Chris. (2010-07-06). "Renewable energy and role of Marykirk's James Blyth". D. C. Thomson & Co.
- [https://patents.google.com/patent/US366945 U.S. Patent No. 366,945], filed July 6, 1886; second patent granted October 11, 1887: [https://patents.google.com/patent/US371496 U.S. Patent No. 371,496], filed March 12, 1887.
- "Anna Connelly's 1887 patent for a fire escape (Patent No. 368,816)".
- [https://patents.google.com/patent/US371882A/en US371882A].
- {{US patent. 372786
- Heitz, Robert. "The ''Kontaktbrille'' of Adolf Eugen Fick (1887)". XVIIIth Convention of the Julius-Hirschberg-Gesellschaft Oktober 14th–16th 2004 Innsbruck.
- (March 2001). "Historic Firearm of the Month". Cruffler.com.
- Borthwick, Alastair. (1965). "Yarrows: the first hundred years". Yarrows.
- Westcott, Kathryn. (2011-04-09). "HG Wells or Enrique Gaspar: Whose time machine was first?". [[BBC News]].
- "Copley Medal {{!}} British scientific award".
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