1682 in science
The year 1682 in science and technology involved some significant events.
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| 1682 in science | 
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| Paleontology | 
| Extraterrestrial environment | 
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| Terrestrial environment | 
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Astronomy
    
- A comet is observed, which later becomes known as Comet Halley, after Edmund Halley successfully predicts its return in 1758.
 
Discoveries
    
- Antony Van Leeuwenhoek discovers the banded pattern of muscle fibers.
 
Botany
    
- John Ray publishes his Methodus plantarum nova, which sets out his system to divide flowering plants into monocotyledons and dicotyledons.
 
Exploration
    
- René Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle canoes down the Mississippi River, naming the Mississippi basin Louisiana in honour of Louis XIV.
 
Medicine
    
- English naval surgeon James Yonge (1646–1721) publishes Wounds of the Brain Proved Curable, probably the first monograph in English on surgery of the head.
 
Births
    
- February 4 – Johann Friedrich Böttger, German alchemist and developer of porcelain manufacture (died 1719)
 - February 25 – Giovanni Battista Morgagni, Italian anatomist (died 1771)
 - March 24 – Mark Catesby, English naturalist (died 1749)
 - April 16 – John Hadley, English mathematician (died 1744)
 - July 10 – Roger Cotes, English mathematician (died 1716)
 
Deaths
    
- July 12 – Jean Picard, French astronomer (born 1620)
 - October – J. J. Becher, German physician and chemist (born 1635)
 
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