Lists of British Inventions - Scientific Innovations

Scientific Innovations

  • Logarithms: John Napier (1550–1617)
  • The theory of electromagnetism: James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879)
  • Popularising the decimal point: John Napier (1550–1617)
  • The Gregorian telescope: James Gregory (1638–1675)
  • The concept of latent heat: Joseph Black (1728–1799)
  • The pyroscope, atmometer and aethrioscope scientific instruments: Sir John Leslie (1766–1832)
  • Identifying the nucleus in living cells: Robert Brown (1773–1858)
  • Hypnotism: James Braid (1795–1860)
  • Transplant rejection: Professor Thomas Gibson (1940s) the first medical doctor to understand the relationship between donor graft tissue and host tissue rejection and tissue transplantation by his work on aviation burns victims during World War II.
  • Colloid chemistry: Thomas Graham (1805–1869)
  • The kelvin SI unit of temperature: William Thomson, Lord Kelvin (1824–1907)
  • Devising the diagramatic system of representing chemical bonds: Alexander Crum Brown (1838–1922)
  • Criminal fingerprinting: Henry Faulds (1843–1930)
  • The noble gases: Sir William Ramsay (1852–1916)
  • The Cloud chamber: Charles Thomson Rees Wilson (1869–1959)
  • Pioneering work on nutrition and poverty: John Boyd Orr (1880–1971)
  • The ultrasound scanner: Ian Donald (1910–1987)
  • Ferrocene synthetic substances: Peter Ludwig Pauson in 1955
  • The MRI body scanner: John Mallard and James Huchinson from (1974–1980)
  • The first cloned mammal (Dolly the Sheep): Was conducted in The Roslin Institute research centre in 1996
  • Seismometer innovations thereof: James David Forbes
  • Metaflex fabric innovations thereof: University of St. Andrews (2010) application of the first manufacturing fabrics that manipulate light in bending it around a subject. Before this such light manipulating atoms were fixed on flat hard surfaces. The team at St Andrews are the first to develop the concept to fabric.
  • Macaulayite: Dr. Jeff Wilson of the Macaulay Institute, Aberdeen.

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Famous quotes containing the words scientific and/or innovations:

    Truth is that concordance of an abstract statement with the ideal limit towards which endless investigation would tend to bring scientific belief, which concordance the abstract statement may possess by virtue of the confession of its inaccuracy and one-sidedness, and this confession is an essential ingredient of truth.
    Charles Sanders Peirce (1839–1914)

    By such innovations are languages enriched, when the words are adopted by the multitude, and naturalized by custom.
    Miguel De Cervantes (1547–1616)