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The year 1731 in science and technology involved some significant events.

Agriculture and horticulture

  • Philip Miller publishes The Gardeners Dictionary, containing the Methods of Cultivating and Improving the Kitchen Fruit and Flower Garden in London.
  • Jethro Tull publishes The New Horse-Houghing Husbandry; or, an essay on the principles of tillage and vegetation in London.

Astronomy

  • John Bevis observes the Crab Nebula for the first time in the modern era.
  • The octant is developed by John Hadley (it will eventually be replaced as an essential tool of navigation by the sextant).
  • The orrery (or planetarium model) is developed as an apparatus showing the relative positions of heavenly bodies in the Solar System by using balls moved by wheelwork.

Geology

  • The modern seismograph is developed by Italian scientist Nicholas Cerillo using a pendulum.

Mathematics

  • The Euclidean distance formula is first published by Alexis Clairaut.

Medicine

  • September – The first successful appendectomy is performed by English surgeon William Cookesley.
  • Laura Bassi becomes the first official female university teacher on being appointed professor of anatomy at the University of Bologna at the age of 21.
  • The Society for the Improvement of Medical Knowledge in Edinburgh begins publication of the peer reviewed Medical Essays and Observations.

Technology

  • The harpoon gun is developed and used for the purpose of throwing the harpoon into the body of whales.

Publications

  • Publication begins in Augsburg and Ulm of Johann Jakob Scheuchzer's Physica Sacra which attempts to provide a scientific explanation of Biblical history.

Awards

  • Copley Medal: The first Copley Medal is awarded to Stephen Gray.

Births

  • October 10 – Henry Cavendish, English scientist (died 1810)
  • November 9 – Benjamin Banneker, African-American astronomer and surveyor (died 1806)
  • December 12 – Erasmus Darwin, English physician and botanist (died 1802)

Deaths

  • January 6 – Étienne François Geoffroy, French chemist (born 1672)
  • December 29 – Brook Taylor, English mathematician (born 1685)

References