1693 in science
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The year 1693 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Actuarial science
- Edmond Halley publishes an article in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society on life annuities featuring a life table constructed on the basis of statistics from Breslau provided by Caspar Neumann.
Botany
- Publication of Charles Plumier's first work, Description des plantes de l'Amérique, in Paris, principally devoted to ferns.
Mathematics
- Bernard Frénicle de Bessy's Des quarrez ou tables magiques, a treatise on magic squares, is published posthumously, describing all 880 essentially different normal magic squares of order 4.
Physiology and medicine
- Flemish anatomist Philip Verheyen, in his widely used text Corporis Humani Anatomia, is the first to record the name of the Achilles tendon.[1]
Births
- March – James Bradley, Astronomer Royal (died 1762)
Deaths
- Elisabeth Hevelius, Danzig astronomer (born 1647)
- Elias Tillandz, Swedish physician and botanist in Finland (born 1640)
References
- ↑ Chapter XV, p. 328: "quae vulgo dicitur chorda Achillis".
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