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| ||1336 – Four thousand defenders of Pilėnai commit mass suicide rather than be taken captive by the Teutonic Knights. | | File:John Dee.jpg|link=John Dee (nonfiction)|1598: [[John Dee (nonfiction)|John Dee]] demonstrates the solar eclipse by viewing an image through a pinhole. Two versions from Ashmole and Aubrey give different details of who was present. Dee's Diary only contains the notation, "the eclips. A clowdy day, but great darkness about 9 1/2 maine". |
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| File:Tycho Brahe.jpg|link=Tycho Brahe (nonfiction)|1572: Astronomer [[Tycho Brahe (nonfiction)|Tycho Brahe]] uses [[scrying engine]] make improved astronomical observations. | | File:Friedrich Reinitzer.jpg|link=Friedrich Reinitzer (nonfiction)|1857: Botanist and chemist [[Friedrich Reinitzer (nonfiction)|Friedrich Reinitzer]] born. In late 1880s, experimenting with cholesteryl benzoate, Reinitzer discovered the properties of what would later be called liquid crystals; although the discovery attracted attention, interest soon faded as no practical uses were found at the time. |
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| ||1670 – Maria Margarethe Kirch, German astronomer and mathematician (d. 1720) | | File:Theodor Svedberg.jpg|link=Theodor Svedberg (nonfiction)|1971: Chemist and academic [[Theodor Svedberg (nonfiction)|Theodor Svedberg]] dies. He was awarded the 1926 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his pioneering use of analytical ultracentrifugation to distinguish pure proteins from one another. |
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| ||1682 – Giovanni Battista Morgagni, Italian anatomist and pathologist (d. 1771) | | File:Hugo Steinhaus.jpg|link=Hugo Steinhaus (nonfiction)|1972: Mathematician and academic [[Hugo Steinhaus (nonfiction)|Hugo Steinhaus]] dies. He discovered mathematician Stefan Banach, with whom he made notable contributions to functional analysis, including the Banach–Steinhaus theorem. |
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| File:Samuel Colt.jpg|link=Samuel Colt (nonfiction)|1836: [[Samuel Colt (nonfiction)|Samuel Colt]] is granted a United States patent for the Colt revolver. | | File:Glenn Seaborg.jpg|link=Glenn T. Seaborg (nonfiction)|1999: Chemist [[Glenn T. Seaborg (nonfiction)|Glenn T. Seaborg]] dies. He shared the 1951 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the synthesis, discovery, and investigation of transuranium elements. |
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| File:USS Cairo.jpg|link=USS Cairo (nonfiction)|1861: [[USS Cairo (nonfiction)|USS Cairo]] retrofitted with military [[Gnomon algorithm functions]].
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| File:Wallace War-Heels.jpg|link=Wallace War-Heels|1864: [[Wallace War-Heels]] rescues lost band of travellers, gets them safely to Kansas City, then robs them of one-third of their money and possessions.
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| ||1866 – Miners in Calaveras County, California, discover what is now called the Calaveras Skull – human remains that supposedly indicated that man, mastodons, and elephants had co-existed.
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| ||William Thomas Astbury FRS (also Bill Astbury; 25 February 1898, Longton – 4 June 1961, Leeds) was an English physicist and molecular biologist who made pioneering X-ray diffraction studies of biological molecules.[2] His work on keratin provided the foundation for Linus Pauling's discovery of the alpha helix. He also studied the structure for DNA in 1937 and made the first step in the elucidation of its structure.
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| ||1901 – J. P. Morgan incorporates the United States Steel Corporation.
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| ||Geoffrey William Arnold Dummer, MBE (1945), C.Eng., IEE Premium Award, FIEEE, MIEE, USA Medal of Freedom with Bronze Palm (25 February 1909 – 9 September 2002) was an English electronics engineer and consultant who is credited as being the first person to conceptualise and build a prototype of the integrated circuit, commonly called the microchip, in the late-1940s and early 1950s.
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| ||1919 – Oregon places a one cent per U.S. gallon tax on gasoline, becoming the first U.S. state to levy a gasoline tax.
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| ||1920 – Marcel-Auguste Dieulafoy, French archaeologist and engineer (b. 1844)
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| ||1922 – Henri Désiré Landru, French serial killer (b. 1869)
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| ||Masatoşi Gündüz İkeda (Japanese: 池田 正敏 ギュンドゥズ Ikeda Masatoshi Gyunduzu) (b. 25 February 1926), was a Turkish mathematician of Japanese ancestry, known for his contributions to the field of algebraic number theory.
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| ||1928 – Charles Jenkins Laboratories of Washington, D.C. becomes the first holder of a broadcast license for television from the Federal Radio Commission.
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| ||1933 – The USS Ranger is launched. It is the first US Navy ship to be designed from the start of construction as an aircraft carrier.
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| ||1935 – Oktay Sinanoğlu, Turkish chemist and academic (d. 2015)
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| ||1939 – The first of 2 1⁄2 million Anderson air raid shelters appeared in North London.
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| ||1941 – February strike: In occupied Amsterdam, a general strike is declared in response to increasing anti-Jewish measures instituted by the Nazis.
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| ||1950 – George Minot, American physician and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1885)
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| ||1951 – The first Pan American Games were officially opened in Buenos Aires, Argentina by President Juan Perón.
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| ||1953 – Sergei Winogradsky, Ukrainian-Russian microbiologist and ecologist (b. 1856)
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| ||File:EBR-I powers four light bulbs.jpg|link=Experimental Breeder Reactor I (nonfiction)|1954: The [[Experimental Breeder Reactor I (nonfiction)|EBR-1]] in Arco, Idaho used in [[high-energy literature]] experiment.
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| ||1956 – In his speech On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences, Nikita Khrushchev, leader of the Soviet Union denounces the cult of personality of Joseph Stalin.
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| ||1957 – Bugs Moran, American mob boss (b. 1893)
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| ||1971 – Theodor Svedberg, Swedish chemist and academic, Nobel Prize laureate (b. 1884)
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| File:Hugo Steinhaus.jpg|link=Hugo Steinhaus (nonfiction)|1972: Mathematician and academic [[Hugo Steinhaus (nonfiction)|Hugo Steinhaus]] dies. He "discovered" mathematician Stefan Banach, with whom he made notable contributions to functional analysis, including the Banach–Steinhaus theorem.
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| ||1988 – Bernard Ashmole, English archaeologist and historian (b. 1894)
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| File:Glenn Seaborg.jpg|link=Glenn T. Seaborg (nonfiction)|1999: Chemist [[Glenn T. Seaborg (nonfiction)|Glenn T. Seaborg]] dies. He shared the 1951 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the synthesis, discovery, and investigation of transuranium elements.
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| ||Donald Lewes Hings, CM MBE (d. February 25, 2004) was a Canadian inventor. In 1937 he created a portable radio signaling system for his employer CM&S, which he called a "packset", but which later became known as the "Walkie-Talkie".
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