Template:Selected anniversaries/July 9: Difference between revisions

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||1169: Guido of Ravenna dies ... cartographer, entomologist and historian.
||1169: Guido of Ravenna dies ... cartographer, entomologist and historian. No DOB. No pics online.


||1766: Jacob Perkins born ... inventor, mechanical engineer and physicist. Born in Newburyport, Massachusetts, Perkins was apprenticed to a goldsmith. He soon made himself known with a variety of useful mechanical inventions and eventually had twenty-one American and nineteen English patents. He is known as the father of the refrigerator. Pic.
||1766: Jacob Perkins born ... inventor, mechanical engineer and physicist. Born in Newburyport, Massachusetts, Perkins was apprenticed to a goldsmith. He soon made himself known with a variety of useful mechanical inventions and eventually had twenty-one American and nineteen English patents. He is known as the father of the refrigerator. Pic.
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||1847: Edwin J. Houston born ... businessman, professor, consulting electrical engineer, inventor and author. Pic.
||1847: Edwin J. Houston born ... businessman, professor, consulting electrical engineer, inventor and author. Pic.
||1850: Persian prophet Báb is executed in Tabriz, Persia.


||1856: Lorenzo Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro dies ... scientist, most noted for his contribution to molecular theory now known as Avogadro's law, which states that equal volumes of gases under the same conditions of temperature and pressure will contain equal numbers of molecules. Pic.
||1856: Lorenzo Romano Amedeo Carlo Avogadro dies ... scientist, most noted for his contribution to molecular theory now known as Avogadro's law, which states that equal volumes of gases under the same conditions of temperature and pressure will contain equal numbers of molecules. Pic.
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File:John Archibald Wheeler 1985.jpg|link=John Archibald Wheeler (nonfiction)|1911: Theoretical physicist [[John Archibald Wheeler (nonfiction)|John Archibald Wheeler]] born. He will link the term "black hole" to objects with gravitational collapse, and coin the terms "quantum foam", "neutron moderator", "wormhole" and "it from bit".
File:John Archibald Wheeler 1985.jpg|link=John Archibald Wheeler (nonfiction)|1911: Theoretical physicist [[John Archibald Wheeler (nonfiction)|John Archibald Wheeler]] born. He will link the term "black hole" to objects with gravitational collapse, and coin the terms "quantum foam", "neutron moderator", "wormhole" and "it from bit".


||1914: Willi Stoph born ... engineer and politician, 4th Prime Minister of East Germany.
||1914: Willi Stoph born ... engineer and politician, 4th Prime Minister of East Germany. Pic.


File:Georg Cantor 1894.png|link=Georg Cantor (nonfiction)|1917: Mathematician and philosopher [[Georg Cantor (nonfiction)|Georg Cantor]] publishes new [[Set theory (nonfiction)|theory of sets]] derived from [[Gnomon algorithm functions]]. Colleagues hail it as "a magisterial contribution to science and art of detecting and preventing [[crimes against mathematical constants]]."
File:Georg Cantor 1894.png|link=Georg Cantor (nonfiction)|1917: Mathematician and philosopher [[Georg Cantor (nonfiction)|Georg Cantor]] publishes new [[Set theory (nonfiction)|theory of sets]] derived from [[Gnomon algorithm functions]]. Colleagues hail it as "a magisterial contribution to science and art of detecting and preventing [[crimes against mathematical constants]]."
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||1933: Oliver Sacks born ... neurologist and writer. Many of his books relate case histories of neurologically damaged people. His empathy with those afflicted with strange conditions, including. Tourette's syndrome, amnesia, and autism, has been the hallmark of his writings. In his first book, Migraine: Evolution of a Common Disorder(1970, he began his approach of considering mental and emotional states while stressing links between them and physical afflictions. In the late 1960s in New York, he encountered some 80 people suffering from a “sleeping sickness” (known from its spread around the world about 1916-20). He experimented by giving some of them the drug L-DOPA and obtained seemingly amazing results, an “awakening,” but most soon regressed. Pic.
||1933: Oliver Sacks born ... neurologist and writer. Many of his books relate case histories of neurologically damaged people. His empathy with those afflicted with strange conditions, including. Tourette's syndrome, amnesia, and autism, has been the hallmark of his writings. In his first book, Migraine: Evolution of a Common Disorder(1970, he began his approach of considering mental and emotional states while stressing links between them and physical afflictions. In the late 1960s in New York, he encountered some 80 people suffering from a “sleeping sickness” (known from its spread around the world about 1916-20). He experimented by giving some of them the drug L-DOPA and obtained seemingly amazing results, an “awakening,” but most soon regressed. Pic.


||1937: The silent film archives of Fox Film Corporation are destroyed by the 1937 Fox vault fire.
||1937: The silent film archives of Fox Film Corporation are destroyed by the 1937 Fox vault fire. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1937_Fox_vault_fire Pic.


||1938: Frederick Peterson dies ... neurologist and poet. Peterson was at the forefront of psychoanalysis in the United States, publishing one of the first articles of Freud and Jung's theories of Free Association in 1909.
||1938: Frederick Peterson dies ... neurologist and poet. Peterson was at the forefront of psychoanalysis in the United States, publishing one of the first articles of Freud and Jung's theories of Free Association in 1909.

Revision as of 09:57, 26 February 2019