1878 in science
The year 1878 in science and technology involved many significant events, listed below.
Astronomy
- English astronomer Richard A. Proctor describes the Zone of Avoidance, the area of the night sky that is obscured by our own galaxy, for the first time.
Biology
- Death of last confirmed Cape Lion.
Chemistry
- The rare earth element holmium is identified in erbium by Marc Delafontaine and Jacques-Louis Soret in Geneva and by Per Teodor Cleve in Sweden.
Conservation
- An Act of Parliament in the United Kingdom places Epping Forest in the care of the City of London Corporation to remain unenclosed.
Exploration
- June 22 – Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld sets out on the year-long first navigation of the Northern Sea Route, the shipping lane from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean along the Siberian coast.
Geology
- Clarence King publishes Systematic Geology.
- Charles Lapworth publishes his analysis of the change in graptolite fossils through sequences of exposed shales in southern Scotland, establishing the importance of using graptolites to understand stratigraphic sequences.
Mathematics
- Belgian mathematician Victor D'Hondt describes the D'Hondt method of voting.
- English mathematician Rev. William Allen Whitworth is the first to publish Bertrand's ballot theorem.
Medicine
- Cesare Lombroso publishes L'uomo delinquente, setting out his theory of criminal atavism.
- Ádám Politzer publishes Lehrbuch der Ohrenheilkunde, a major otology textbook.
- Dentists Act in the United Kingdom limits the title of "dentist" and "dental surgeon" to qualified and registered practitioners.
Meteorology
- February 11 – The first weekly weather report is published in the United Kingdom.
Paleontology
- 31 Iguanodon skeletons are discovered in a coal mine at Bernissart, Belgium.
- The sauropod genus Diplodocus is first named by Othniel Charles Marsh as well as the Theropod genus Allosaurus. These are both from the Jurassic aged Morrison formation.
Physics
- January 18 – Romanian mathematician Spiru Haret defends his doctoral thesis, which proves a result fundamental to the n-body problem in celestial mechanics.
Technology
- February 19 – The phonograph is patented by Thomas Edison. The oldest known audio recording is recovered from this device in 2012.
- March – The 'basic' process, enabling the use of phosphoric iron ore in steelmaking, developed at Blaenavon Ironworks by Percy Gilchrist and Sidney Gilchrist Thomas, is first made public.
- May 22 – John Philip Holland's experimental powered submarine Holland I is launched in Paterson, New Jersey.
- June 15 – Eadweard Muybridge produces the sequence of stop-motion still photographs Sallie Gardner at a Gallop in California, a predecessor of silent film demonstrating that all four feet of a galloping horse are off the ground at the same time.
- August – Cleopatra's Needle is raised onto its base in London.
- October 14 – The world's first recorded floodlit football fixture is played at Bramall Lane in Sheffield.
- December 18 – Joseph Swan of Newcastle upon Tyne in England announces his invention of an incandescent light bulb.
- December 31 – Karl Benz produces a two-stroke gas engine.
- William Crookes invents the Crookes tube which produces cathode rays.
- Osbourn Dorsey obtains a patent in the United States for a "door-holding device".
- Gustav Kessel obtains a patent in Germany for an espresso machine.
- Czech painter Karel Klíč perfects the photogravure process.
- Lester Allan Pelton produces the first operational Pelton wheel.
- Remington, in the United States, introduce their No. 2 typewriter, the first with a shift key enabling production of lower as well as upper case characters.
Institutions
- October 1 – Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University opens as Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College in the United States.
Awards
- Copley Medal: Jean Baptiste Boussingault
- Wollaston Medal for Geology: Thomas Wright
Births
- January 1 – A. K. Erlang, Danish mathematician
- January 7 – Samuel James Cameron, Scottish obstetrician
- January 25 – Ernst Alexanderson, Swedish-born television pioneer
- February 5 – André Citroën, French automobile manufacturer
- February 8 – Martin Buber, Austrian philosopher
- February 10 – Jennie Smillie, Canadian gynecological surgeon
- February 28 – Pierre Fatou, French mathematician
- March 4 – Peter D. Ouspensky, Russian philosopher
- April 16 – Owen Thomas Jones, Welsh geologist
- June 3 – Barney Oldfield, American automobile racer and pioneer
- June 12 – James Oliver Curwood, American novelist and conservationist
- July 12 – Peeter Põld, Estonian politician and pedagogical scientist
- August 28 – George Whipple, American winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- September 5 – Robert von Lieben, Austrian physicist
- September 13 – Matilde Moisant, American pilot
- November 7 – Lise Meitner, Austrian-Swedish physicist
- November 8 – Dorothea Bate, Welsh-born paleozoologist
- November 26 – Major Taylor, American cyclist
- December 25 – Louis Chevrolet, Swiss-born race driver and automobile builder
- December 25 – Joseph Schenck, Russian-born film executive
Deaths
- January 18 – William Stokes, Irish physician
- January 18 – Antoine César Becquerel, French scientist
- January 19 – Henri Victor Regnault, French physical chemist
- February 8 – Elias Magnus Fries, Swedish botanist
- February 10 – Claude Bernard, French physiologist
- February 26 – Angelo Secchi, Italian astronomer
- March 16 – William Banting, English undertaker and dietician
- May 13 – Joseph Henry, American physicist
- June 6 – Robert Stirling, Scottish clergyman and inventor
- July 23 – Baron Carl von Rokitansky, Bohemian pathologist
- September 25 – August Heinrich Petermann, German cartographer
- Friedrich Freese, German botanist