1881 in science
The year 1881 in science and technology involved some significant events, listed below.
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| 1881 in science | 
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| Paleontology | 
| Extraterrestrial environment | 
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| Terrestrial environment | 
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| Other/related | 
Astronomy
    
- 22 May – John Tebbutt discover the long-period comet, C/1881 K1 (also known as the Great Comet of 1881, Comet Tebbutt, 1881 III, 1881b).[1]
 
Biology
    
- October – Charles Darwin publishes his last scientific book The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms.
 - L. S. Poliakov describes the wild horse discovered by Nikolai Przhevalsky in Mongolia in 1879 as a new species, Przewalski's Horse (Equus przewalski poliakov).[2][3]
 - The first systematic study in forensic entomology is conducted by physician and entomologist Hermann Reinhard in Germany.[4]
 
Chemistry
    
- Friedrich Beilstein publishes the first edition of his Handbuch der organischen Chemie.
 
History of science and technology
    
- The birch bark Bakhshali manuscript, incorporating perhaps the earliest known use of mathematical zero, is unearthed near Bakhshali in British India.
 - Publication in England of a pioneering study in industrial archaeology, H. A. Fletcher's "The archaeology of the west Cumberland iron trade".[5]
 
Mathematics
    
- Simon Newcomb makes the first statement of Benford's law.[6]
 
Medicine
    
- July 13 – Dr. George Goodfellow performs the first laparotomy to remove a bullet.
 - September 25 – The first modern Caesarean section is performed successfully by German gynecologist Ferdinand Adolf Kehrer in Meckesheim using the transverse incision technique.
 - December – Eduard von Hofmann carries out autopsy studies of the nearly 400 victims of the Vienna Ringtheater fire, carbon monoxide poisoning being held an underlying cause of death.
 - Louis Pasteur discovers a vaccine for anthrax.
 - Carlos Finlay, a Cuban doctor, first proposes that yellow fever is transmitted by mosquitoes rather than direct human contact.[7]
 - French obstetrician Étienne Stéphane Tarnier introduces a form of neonatal incubator (couveuse) for routine care of premature infants at the Paris Maternité.[8]
 - English ophthalmologist Waren Tay publishes the first description of the genetic disorder which will become known as Tay–Sachs disease.[9]
 - approx. date – The non-invasive sphygmomanometer, for the measurement of blood pressure, is invented by Samuel Siegfried Karl von Basch.[10]
 
Technology
    
- March 1 – The Cunard Line's SS Servia, the first steel transatlantic liner, is launched at J. & G. Thomson's yard at Clydebank in Scotland.[11]
 - May 16 – The Gross-Lichterfelde Tramway, the world's first electric tramway, is opened in Berlin by Siemens & Halske.[12]
 - June – The positive-buoyancy powered submarine "Fenian Ram" (Holland Boat No. II), designed by John Philip Holland, is first submersion-tested in New York City.
 - September 26 – Godalming in England becomes the first town to have its streets illuminated by electric light (hydroelectrically generated).[13]
 - October 10 – Richard D'Oyly Carte's Savoy Theatre opens in London, the world's first public building to be fully lit by electricity, using Joseph Swan's incandescent light bulbs.[11][14][15] The stage is first lit electrically on December 28.[16]
 - December 21 – SS Aberdeen, the first oceangoing ship successfully powered by a triple expansion steam engine, designed by Alexander Carnegie Kirk, is launched at Robert Napier and Sons' yard at Govan in Scotland.
 - Peter Herdic patents the Herdic horse-drawn cab in the United States.
 
Awards
    
- Copley Medal: Karl Adolph Wurtz[17]
 - Wollaston Medal for Geology: Peter Martin Duncan
 
Births
    
- January 29 – Alice Catherine Evans (died 1975), American microbiologist.
 - January 31 – Irving Langmuir (died 1957), American chemist.
 - March 17 – Walter Rudolf Hess (died 1973), Swiss physiologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
 - April 28 – Edith A. Roberts (died 1977), American plant ecologist.
 - May 1 – Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (died 1955), French paleontologist and philosopher.
 - August 6 – Alexander Fleming (died 1955), British bacteriologist.
 - September 18 – Vera Lebedeva (died 1968), Soviet Russian pediatrician.
 - October 4 – George Constantinescu (died 1965), Romanian engineer.
 - October 11 – Lewis Fry Richardson (died 1953), British mathematical physicist.
 - October 22 – Clinton Davisson (died 1958), American physicist.
 - November 9 – Margaret Reed Lewis (died 1970), American cell biologist.
 - November 13 – Ludwig Koch (died 1974), German Jewish animal sound recordist.
 
Deaths
    
- February 3 – John Gould (born 1804), English zoologist.
 - March 26 – Lovisa Åhrberg (born 1801), Swedish surgeon.
 - May 14 – Mary Seacole (born 1805), Jamaican-born nurse.
 - May 19 – Joseph Barnard Davis (born 1801), English craniologist, physician and anthropologist.
 - May 26 – Jakob Bernays (born 1824), German philologist.
 - June 23 – Matthias Jakob Schleiden (born 1804), German biologist.
 - June 29 – Maurice Raynaud (born 1834), French physician.
 - July 27 – Hewett Watson (born 1804), English biologist.
 - October 31 – George W. DeLong (born 1844), American Arctic explorer.
 - November 30 - Jean-Alfred Gautier (born 1793), Swiss astronomer[18]
 
References
    
- "THE GREAT COMET OF 1881". The South Australian Advertiser ( Adelaide, South Australia). 8 June 1881. letter from C. Todd
 - "Przewalski's horse". TAKH. 2009. Archived from the original on 2012-03-02. Retrieved 2011-11-03.
 - Hellemans, Alexander; Bunch, Bryan (1988). The Timetables of Science. Simon & Schuster. p. 304. ISBN 0671621300.
 - with; Moritz Brauer, Friedrich (1882). "Beiträge zur Gräberfauna" ["Contributions on the fauna of graves"]". Verh. k. & k. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien. 31: 207–210.
 - Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmorland Archaeological Society 5:5–21.
 - Newcomb, Simon (1881). "Note on the frequency of use of the different digits in natural numbers". American Journal of Mathematics. 4: 39–40. doi:10.2307/2369148. JSTOR 2369148.
 - Chaves, Carballo E. (2005). "Carlos Finlay and yellow fever: triumph over adversity". Military Medicine. 170: 881–5. doi:10.7205/milmed.170.10.881. PMID 16435764.
 - Dunn, P. M. (2002). "Stéphane Tarnier (1828–1897), the architect of perinatology in France". Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal and Neonatal Edition. 86 (2): F137–9. doi:10.1136/fn.86.2.f137. PMC 1721389. PMID 11882561.
 - Tay, Waren (1881). "Symmetrical changes in the region of the yellow spot in each eye of an infant". Transactions of the Ophthalmological Society. 1: 55–57.
 - Booth, Jeremy (1977). "A short history of blood pressure measurement". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 70 (11): 793–9. doi:10.1177/003591577707001112. PMC 1543468. PMID 341169.
 - Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 434–435. ISBN 0-304-35730-8.
 - "The Siemens tram from past to present" (PDF). Siemens. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-25. Retrieved 2011-06-16.
 - "Godalming Power Station". Engineering Timelines. Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2010-07-06.
 - "The Savoy Theatre". The Times. London. 1881-10-03. p. 7.
 - Burgess, Michael (January 1975). "Richard D'Oyly Carte". The Savoyard: 7–11.
 - "Savoy Theatre". The Times. 1881-12-29. p. 4. Retrieved 2012-01-30.
 - "Copley Medal | British scientific award". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 23 July 2020.
 - Marcel Golay: Alfred Gautier in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
 
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