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The year 1807 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.

Astronomy

  • March 29 – H. W. Olbers discovers the asteroid which Carl Friedrich Gauss names Vesta.

Chemistry

  • Potassium and sodium are isolated by Sir Humphry Davy.
  • The use of fulminate in firearms is patented by Scottish clergyman Alexander John Forsyth.

Geology

  • The Geological Society is founded in London; among the more prominent founders are William Babington, James Parkinson, Humphry Davy and George Bellas Greenough.

Mathematics

  • William Wallace proves that any two simple polygons of equal area are equidecomposable, later known as the Wallace–Bolyai–Gerwien theorem.

Medicine

  • Samuel Hahnemann first introduces the term 'homeopathy' in an essay, "Indications of the Homeopathic Employment of Medicines in Ordinary Practice", published in Versammlung der Hufelandische medicinisch-chirurgischen Gesellschaft.
  • British Army surgeon John Vetch describes the keratoconjunctivitis ("Egyptian ophthalmia") suffered by troops returned from service overseas; he identifies it as epidemic.

Technology

  • July 20 – French brothers Claude and Nicéphore Niépce receive a patent for their Pyréolophore, an early internal combustion engine, having demonstrated it powering a boat on the Saône.
  • August 17 – Robert Fulton's North River Steamboat makes her first trip from New York City to Albany.
  • November 19 – English inventor Lionel Lukin launches the world's first sailing self-righting rescue life-boat, the Frances Anne, at Lowestoft.
  • William Cubitt patents self-regulating sails for windmills.
  • Henry Maudslay patents an improved table engine.
  • William Hyde Wollaston patents the camera lucida.

Zoology

  • April 21 – The Tasmanian devil is first described, by George Prideaux Robert Harris.

Publications

  • Alexander von Humboldt's begins publication.
  • Thomas Young's A Course of Lectures on Natural Philosophy and the Mechanical Arts published.

Awards

  • Copley Medal: Everard Home

Births

  • January 28 – Robert McClure, Irish-born Arctic explorer (died 1873)
  • May 28 – Louis Agassiz, Swiss-born American zoologist and geologist (died 1873)
  • November 14 – Auguste Laurent, French chemist (died 1853)
  • November 30 – William Farr, English epidemiologist (died 1883)

Deaths

  • February 27 – Louise du Pierry, French astronomer (born 1746)
  • April 4 – Jérôme Lalande, French astronomer (born 1732)
  • December 5 – Francis Willis, English physician specialising in mental disorders (born 1718)

References