Early Americas Digital Archive Newfoundland. harriot, thomas (15601621),, A briefe and true report ofthe new found land of Virginia. harriot, thomas (1560-1621),, Briefe http://www.mith2.umd.edu:8080/eada/html/results.jsp?action=authorBrowse&authorSt
Sunspots Observed By Thomas Harriot In 1611-1613 Title Sunspots Observed by thomas harriot in 16111613 Authors Herr,RB Journal Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1978BAAS...10..638H
Extractions: Title: Sunspots Observed by Thomas Harriot in 1611-1613 Authors: Herr, R. B. Journal: Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 10, p.638 Publication Date: Origin: ADS Bibliographic Code: Abstract Not Available Send high resolution image to Level 2 Postscript Printer Send low resolution image to Level 2 Postscript Printer Send low resolution image to Level 1 Postscript Printer Get high resolution PDF image Get low resolution PDF Send 300 dpi image to PCL Printer Send 150 dpi image to PCL Printer Bibtex entry for this abstract Custom formatted entry for this abstract (see Preferences) Use: Authors Title Return: Query Results Return items starting with number Query Form Database: Astronomy/Planetary Instrumentation Physics/Geophysics ArXiv Preprints NASA ADS Homepage ADS Sitemap Query Form Preferences ... FAQ
A - L CONTENTS RAILWAYS SAWDON, thomas WILLIAM, ROBERT/ harriot, PAINTER, Sept 20, 1839. SCOTCHBURN,JANE, JANE, WIDOW OF THE LATE THOS SCOTCHBURN WHO DIED OCT LAST, Dec 2, 1837. http://www.dg.petch.btinternet.co.uk/DriffieldbabM-Z.htm
Extractions: A - L CONTENTS RAILWAYS ALL SAINTS PARISH CHURCH, GREAT DRIFFIELD BAPTISMS 1836 1850 M - Z FICHE PE 10/6 I.S.O. or I.D.O. = illigitimate son/daughter of This transcription is incomplete (still gathering them) and has not been double checked for accuracy yet, so please only use it for guidance. As in all cases, always refer to original entries for verification. Remember to check all spellings for a name eg. Crosier appears as Grozier SURNAME CHRISTIAN NAME PARENTS PROFESSION DATE MARSHALL THOMAS JAMES/ JANE LABOURER Sept 8, 1836 MAYNARD DAVID WILLIAM/ MARGARET LABOURER Jan 12, 1837 MEDD WILLIAM, I.S.O. MARGARET SPINSTER Apr 10, 1839 METCALFE MARY ANN WILLIAM THOS/ JANE HATTER Feb 10, 1836 MOODY CHARLOTTE EDWARD/ HARRIOT WHEELWRIGHT Apr 7, 1836 MOODY ROBERT SWALES JAMES/ ANN LABOURER July 24, 1836 MOODY THOMAS WILLIAM GEORGE/ ANN CABINET MAKER Sept 29, 1836 MOODY WILLIAM EDWARD/ HARRIOT JOINER July 23, 1837
Natur Des Lichts Translate this page thomas harriot. thomas harriot (1560-1621) wurde in Oxford, England geboren. Erwar Mathematiker und Astronom. Er gründete die English school of algebra. http://members.aol.com/mblicht1/harriot.htm
À§´ëÇѼöÇÐÀÚ ¸ñ·Ï Born 11 Oct 1923 in Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India Died 16 Oct 1983 in Princeton,New Jersey, USA harriot, thomas harriot Born 1560 in Oxford, England Died 2 http://www.mathnet.or.kr/API/?MIval=people_seek_great&init=H
Extractions: In February 1800 George Heneage Dundas was aboard HMS Queen Charlotte which was the flagship of Lord Keith . Dundas was junior to Cochrane. Upon Cochrane's promotion to Commander of the Speedy, George Heneage Dundas moved up to 5th Lieutenant of the Queen Charlotte. A month later, the Queen Charlotte was accidentally destroyed
ANTHOLOGY of New England. The Kind Master and Dutiful Servant. harriot, thomas, A Brief and True Relation;Higginson, Frances. A Short and True http://www.mith2.umd.edu/summit/Ralph_Bauer/teach/index/ENGL626/
Extractions: Texts and Links Adams, Samuel, The Rights of the Colonists Barlow, Joel, Lemuel Hopkins, David Humphreys, and John Trumbul. The Anarchiad Barlow, Joel. The Columbiad Berkeley, William. On Bacon's Rebellion Beverley, Robert, History and Present State of Virginia (selection) Beverley, Robert. From History and Present State of North Carolina Bradford, William, Of Plymouth Plantation Bradstreet, Anne Poetry (selections) Brown, Charles Brockden. Wieland Byrd, William. From Diary Cabeza de Vaca, Alvar Nunez, Relacion Champlain, Samuel de. From Voyages (on imperial rivalry in America). Champlain, Samuel de. From Voyages (on the founding of Quebec). Cieza de Leon, Pedro de, Chronicles of the Incas (selections) Cole, Thomas, The Course of Empire Columbus, Christopher. Selected Writings Crevecoeur, J. Hector St. John, Letters from an American Farmer Columbus, Christopher, Selected Writings Cook, Ebenezer, The Sot-Weed Factor Cortes, Hernando, Letters (selection) Diaz del Castillo, Bernal, The True History of the Conquest of Mexico Dickinson, John, from Letters from a Farmer Edwards, Jonathan.
Science Timeline Harkins, William D., 1917. Haro, Guillermo, 1951, 1975. harriot, thomas, 1591,1601, 1603. Harrison, John, 1736, 1757, 1759. Harrison, Ross Granville, 1907. http://www.sciencetimeline.net/siteindex_h.htm
Extractions: a b c d ... w-x-y-z Haber, Edgar, 1962 Haber, Fritz,1909, 1915 Habermas, Jurgen, 1968 hackers, 1959 Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich, 1859, 1866, 1940 Hahn, Otto, 1938 Haken, Wolfgang, 1976 Haldane, John Burdon Sanderson, 1924, 1926, 1929, 1932, 1937, 1941 Hale, George Ellery, 1908, 1949 Hales, Stephen, 1727, 1733 Haley, Jay, 1952 Hall, Benjamin D., 1961 Hall, Chester More, 1733 Hall, Edwin Herbert, 1879, 1980 Hall, Howard, 1999 Hall, James, 1795 Hall, Jeffrey C., 1984, 1986, 1991 Hall, John L., 1989 Hall, Marshall, 1833 Halley, Edmund, 1678, 1693, 1705, 1718, 1758, 1759, 1835 hallucinagenic mushroom, 7000 bce Halm, Jacob, 1911 Hamburger, Viktor, 1975 Hamer, Dean H., 1993
Galileo, Cigoli, And The Moon Edgerton believes that when Galileo and thomas harriot simultaneously pioneered theuse of the telescope to study the moon s surface, it was Galileo s training http://www.princeton.edu/~freshman/science/galileo/galileo.html
Extractions: In 1612 Galileo wrote to his friend, the painter Lodovico Cardi, known as Cigoli: The statue does not have its relief by virtue of being wide, long and deep but by virtue of being light in some places and dark in others. And one should note as proof of this that only two of its three dimensions are actually exposed to the eye: length and width (which is the superficies . . . that is to say, periphery or circumference). For, of the objects appearing and seen, we see nothing but their superficies; their depth can not be perceived by the eye because our vision does not penetrate opaque bodies. The eye then sees only length and width and never thickness. Thus, since thickness is never exposed to view, nothing but length and width can be perceived by us in a statue. We know of depth, not as a visual experience per se and absolutely but only be accident and in relation to light and darkness. And all this is present in painting no less than sculpture. . . . But sculpture receives lightness and darkness from nature herself whereas painting receives it from Art. (Edgerton, 225)
Kepler Conjecture - History Fejes Tóth. thomas harriot and the rise of atomism. In 1591 thomas harriot prepareda large triangular chart of numbers, with the the explanatory note http://www.math.pitt.edu/~thales/kepler98/kephistory.html
Extractions: Harriot and the rise of modern atomism Harriot's influence on Kepler. Kepler Hilbert's 18th problem. Kantor's commentary on Hilbert's 18th problem. [In 1591 Thomas Harriot prepared a large triangular chart of numbers, with the the explanatory note:] "There are three speciall groundplats vpon the which may be orderly piled bullets: The triangle: the square: and the oblonge. Concerning pilong there are two questions: one; the nomber of bulletes to be piled being geven with the forme of the gound plat, to know how many must be placed in every rank, with how many rankes in the sayd ground plat. "The second a pile being made to knowe the nomber of bulletes therein conteyned. "ffor the aunsweringe of which two questions this table I haue calculated for the purpose." Obviously, this is a quick reference chart prepared for Ralegh to give information on the ground space required for the storage of cannon balls in connection with the stacking of armaments for his marauding vessels. The chart is ingeniously arranged so that it is possible to read directly the number of cannon balls on the ground or in a pyramid pile with triangular, square, or oblong base. All of this Harriot had worked out by the laws of mathematical progression (not as Miss Rukeyser suggests by experiment), as the rough calculations accompanying the chart make clear. It is interesting to note that on adjacent sheets, Harriot moved, as a mathematician naturally would, into the theory of the sums of the squares, and attempted to determine graphically all the possible configurations that discrete particles could assume a study which led him inevitably to the corpuscular or atomic theory of matter originally deriving from Lucretius and Epicurus.
Early English Algebra weight. They appeared in a work by Stifel in 1544. Picture of harriotthomas harriot (15601621), a native of Oxford, at St. Mary http://vmoc.museophile.com/algebra/section3_2.html
Extractions: Previous: The Origins of Algebra In the first half of the 16th century, Cuthbert Tonstall (1474-1559) and Robert Recorde (1510?-1558) were two of the foremost English mathematicians . They were the first mathematicians at the University of Cambridge whose lives have been recorded in any detail and as such may be considered founders of one of the most important centres of mathematics in the world. Both migrated to Oxford University during their careers. Robert Recorde, perhaps the more important of the two, became a Fellow of All Souls College at Oxford in 1531. The earliest use of the word algebra may be found in Recorde's Pathway of Knowledge (1551) in which he wrote: Also the rule of false position, with dyvers examples not onely vulgar, but some appertayning to the rule of Algebra. In 1557 he introduced the equality sign ` ' in his Whetstone of Witte , chosen ``bicause noe 2 thynges can be moare equalle'' (than two parallel lines of the same length). The symbols ` ' and ' were introduced for the first time in print in John Widman 's Arithmetic (Leipzig, 1489), but only came into general use in England after Recorde's
Thomas Hariot (1560-1621) thomas Hariot (15601621) Last updated on March 24, 2004. Music Three Fugues by CAMPION, thomas (1567-1620); English. Sequenced by D.Lovell. http://www.luminarium.org/renlit/hariot.htm
Harriot il allégea sensiblement les notations confuses de http://www.sciences-en-ligne.com/momo/chronomath/chrono1/Harriot.html
John Prydderch Among the pioneers of the telescope in astronomy were Galileo Galilei, ThomasHarriot, Simon Marius, and in Carmarthenshire, Sir William Lower and John http://brynjones.members.beeb.net/wastronhist/p_jprydderch.html
Extractions: (c.1582-c.1624) The introduction of the telescope to astronomy at the start of the 17th century revolutionised people's understanding of the Universe. The immediate discoveries supported the Copernican model, which put the Sun at the centre of the planetary system rather than the Earth. Among the pioneers of the telescope in astronomy were Galileo Galilei, Thomas Harriot, Simon Marius, and in Carmarthenshire, Sir William Lower and John Prydderch (or Protheroe). John Prydderch (also called John Protheroe, John Pretherch and John Rytherch) was born in about 1582 in Carmarthenshire, son of the very wealthy landowner James Rytherch. He was probably educated at Jesus College, Oxford, and attended Lincoln's Inn, London. He inherited the estate of Nant-yr-hebog (occasionally referred to by its direct English translation, Hawksbrook). Prydderch became friendly with Sir William Lower of Trefenty, only a few miles from Natyrhebog. The two men discussed scientific issues, including astronomy. Through Lower, Prydderch was introduced to the distinguished English scientist Thomas Harriot. When Harriot sent a telescope to Lower, very shortly after the invention of the instrument, Prydderch assisted Lower in making some of the very first telescopic astronomical observations.