On 26 Apr 1774, Leopold von Buch was born, the German geologist, paleontologist and geographer noted for finding flaws in Abraham G. Werner’s hypothesis that rocks come from aqueous origins.
He was profiled by the venerable geologist Sir Archibald Geikie, in The Founders of Geology (1897), who described him as the most illustrious geologist that Germany has produced.
In this excerpt you can learn how Leopold von Buch, one of Werner’s most distinguished pupils, came to change from following his master's Neptunist views to become an advocate of Vulcanism.
On 26 Apr 1884, the New York Times reported that “sending mails by electricity” was to be investigated by the Post Office Committee of the U.S. House, by providing for contracts with an existing telegraph company. The proposal was that since carriage of letters by steam locomotives was already done by contract, the delivery of mails by electricity seemed analagous.
Now that e-mail has reduced snail-mail and troubles the income of the U.S. Postal Service, you may wish to read about the opportunity for Mails by Electricity that was presented more than a century ago.
On 26 Apr 1986 in Pripet, Russia, the Chernobyl nuclear plant exploded in the world’s worst civil nuclear catastrophe. The cloud of radioactive dust spread over Europe.
Today's book pick is: Wormwood Forest: A Natural History of Chernobyl, by Mary Mycio. The author toured the exclusion zone around the damaged plant and found that after two decades, the area deserted by humans has become Europe’s largest wildlife sanctuary. It is a flourishing—at times unearthly—wilderness teeming with large animals and a variety of birds, many of them members of rare and endangered species. Yet the habitat, the plants and the creatures are all radioactive. The facts are at once beautiful and horrible, and the author tells a unique story of science, surprise and suspense.
It is available from Amazon, typically about New from $38.55. Used from $8.75. (As of earlier time of writing - subject to change.)
It is a most gratifying sign of the rapid progress of our time that our best text-books become antiquated so quickly. | |
Anatomy is to physiology as geography is to history; it describes the theatre of events. | |
Replying to G. H. Hardy’s suggestion that the number of a taxi (1729) was “dull”: No, it is a very interesting number; it is the smallest number expressible as a sum of two cubes in two different ways, the two ways being 1³ + 12³ and 9³ + 10³. |
Before you look at today's web page, see if you can answer some of these questions about the events that happened on this day. Some of the names are very familiar. Others will likely stump you. Tickle your curiosity with these questions, then check your answers on today's web page. | |
Births | |
| Arno Penzias is a German-American astrophysicist, born 26 Apr 1933, who shared a Nobel Prize for Physics with Robert Woodrow Wilson. They made a discovery which lent strong support to the big-bang model of cosmic evolution. What was their discovery? |
| A seismologist, born 26 Apr 1900, invented a scale that measures earthquake intensity (which he developed with his colleague, Beno Gutenberg), in the early 1930s. The scale assigns numerical ratings to the energy released by earthquakes, and is known by his name. What is the name of this scientist |
| John James Audubon, born 26 Apr 1785, was a French-American naturalist and artist who is famous for his drawings and paintings of animal life. He explored for his subjects following the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers and the Great Lakes. Finding no interested U.S. publisher, his engravings were made in London. Which type of animal is most frequently the subject in his art? |
Deaths | |
| Carl Bosch (1874-1940) was a German industrial chemist who co-developed the Haber-Bosch process. What is the product of the Haber-Bosch process? |
Events | |
| On 26 Apr 1920, two leading astronomers—Harlow Shapley of the Mount Wilson Observatory and Heber D. Curtis of the Lick Observatory in California—debated each other at the Smithsonian Institution. They held opposite opinions as to whether the Milky Way Galaxy was the only galaxy in the universe, or one of many separate galaxies in the cosmos. By the end of the 1920s, the many galaxies theory was validated by Edwin Hubble. Which of these two scientists, at the time of the debate, believed in the Milky Way as the sole galaxy? |
Fast answers for the previous newsletter for April 25: Austria • Guglielmo Marconi • compass needles were affected by the aurora • the decade including the year 1983 • the decade including the year 1953 • the decade including the year 1961.
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