1605 in science
The year 1605 in science and technology involved some significant events.Exploration
- Habitation at Port-Royal established by France under Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Mons, the first European colonization of Nova Scotia in North America ; the Gregorian calendar is adopted.
Chemistry
- First recorded use of the word Chemistry in English, in Thomas Tymme's The Practice of Chymicall and Hermeticall Physicke, translated from Joseph Duchesne.
- The phenomenon of mechanoluminescence is first discovered by Sir Francis Bacon from scratching sugar with a knife.
- Michal Sedziwój publishes the alchemical treatise A New Light of Alchemy which proposes the existence of the "food of life" within air, much later recognized as oxygen.
Technology
- Chartreuse is invented, a liqueur still made by Carthusian monks, named for the great charterhouse.
Births
- October 19 – Thomas Browne, English physician and encyclopedist
- Martin van den Hove, Dutch astronomer
- approx. date – Semyon Dezhnyov, Pomor navigator
Deaths
- May 4 – Ulisse Aldrovandi, Bolognese naturalist
- December 29 – John Davis, English explorer
- Roger Marbeck, English royal physician