1746 in science explained
The year 1746 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Chemistry
Geology
Mathematics
Physics
- Pierre Louis Maupertuis reads before the Berlin Science Academy the paper Recherche des Lois du Mouvement. He claims that nature acts in such a way as to minimize the product of mass times velocity times distance, in an incomplete but seminal idea that derives in what is known today as the Principle of least action.
Technology
Zoology
- Linnaeus publishes Fauna Svecica.
Awards
Births
Deaths
- June 14 – Colin Maclaurin, Scottish mathematician (born 1698)
- November 14 – Georg Steller, German naturalist (born 1709)
Notes and References
- Web site: Biography (Swedish) . 2011-04-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160314010602/http://www.bgf.nu/ljus/u/ekeblad.html . 2016-03-14 . dead .
- Book: Penderill-Church, John. William Cookworthy 1705–1780: A Study of the Pioneer of True Porcelain Manufacture in England. Truro. Bradford Barton. 1972.
- M. le Chevalier. D'Arcy. Principe Géneral de Dynamique. Mémoires de l'Académie des Sciences. Paris. 1747. 348–356.
- Book: Ferreiro, Larrie D. . Ships and Science: the Birth of Naval Architecture in the Scientific Revolution, 1600–1800 . Cambridge . MIT Press . 2007 . 227 . 978-0-262-06259-6.
- Web site: Copley Medal British scientific award . Encyclopedia Britannica . 21 July 2020 . en.