William Beaumont knew a man named Alexis St. Martin that had a hole in his stomach from a gunshot wound that never fully healed. Since the wound never healed you could see the inside of the stomach. So William Beaumont watched the food being digested. And then had a better understanding of how digestion works.
HE WAS NOT THE GUY THAT SWALLOWED THE STRING!~
seems to have marked the arrival of struggles for the Kiowa.
After attending school in Holzminden, Bunsen matriculated at Göttingen in 1828 and studied chemistry with Friedrich Stromeyer as well as mineralogy with Johann Friedrich Ludwig Hausmann and mathematics with Carl Friedrich Gauss.[1] After obtaining a Ph.D. in 1831, Bunsen spent 1832 and 1833 traveling in Germany, France, and Austria; Friedlieb Runge (who discovered aniline and in 1819 isolated caffeine), Justus von Liebig in Gießen, and Eilhard Mitscherlich in Bonn were among the many scientists he met on his journeys
There is only a scant bit of information known about specific political views of Charles Darwin. His political leaning was on the Whig side of things (i.e. - Liberal), as was everyone in his family, including the Wedgwoods, and most of his friends. It is known that he much enjoyed reading up on the political doings up in London, but he seems to have done so out of a sense of pure entertainment. Although Darwin was a "Country Gentleman" he never became actively involved in politics, except for being the Justice of the Peace for the village of Downe.It is known that Darwin, as well as his friends and family, were very much in favor of the Great Reform Act of 1832, which extended voting rights to millions of formally disenfranchised citizens. He was also a staunch supporter of the abolishment of slavery. Here are a few excerpts from letters Darwin wrote home while on the Beagle Voyage:"The Captain does every thing in his power to assist me, & we get on very well - but I thank my better fortune he has not made me a renegade to Whig principles: I would not be a Tory, if it was merely on account of their cold hearts about that scandal to Christian Nations, Slavery."-- To Revd. John Henslow 18 May 1832 from Rio de Janeiro."What a proud thing for England, if she is the first European nation which utterly abolishes it. I was told before leaving England, that after in Slave countries: all my opinions would be altered; the only alteration I am aware of is forming a much higher estimate of the Negro character."-- To his sister, Catherine, on 22 May 1833 from Maldonado, Rio Plata."It does one's heart good to hear how things are going on in England. Hurrah for the honest Whigs. I trust they will soon attack that monstrous stain on our boasted liberty, Colonial Slavery. I have seen enough of Slavery & the disposition of the negros, to be thoroughly disgusted with the lies & nonsense one hears on the subject in England."-- To John Herbert on 2 June, 1833 from Maldonado, Rio Plata.England passed a law that emancipated all slaves in the British colonies in August of 1833.
Alfred Bernhard Nobel (21 October 1833 - 10 December 1896) was a Swedish chemist, engineer, innovator, and armaments manufacturer. He is the inventor of dynamite. Nobel also owned Bofors, which he had redirected from its previous role as primarily an iron and steel producer to a major manufacturer of cannon and other armaments. Nobel held 355 different patents, dynamite being the most famous. In his last will, he used his enormous fortune to institute the Nobel Prizes. The synthetic element nobelium was named after him. His name also survives in modern-day companies such as Dynamit Nobel and Akzo Nobel, which are descendents of the companies Nobel himself established.
>>Marie Curie - a famous scientist best known for her discovery of radioactivity, and was also the first woman to win a Nobel prize. >>Albert Einstein - showed that light could also be described as particles that carry energy from one place to another. >>Benjamin Franklin - researched that white cloth absorbs less sunlight than dark cloth and suggested that people should wear light colors to keep cool in the summer. >>Galileo Galilei - He was the first to use the telescope for furnishing evidence that the earth revolves around the Sun. This postulate was in contrast to that held by the majority. >>Archimedes - His major achievements are "The Archimedes principle in hydrostatics", the Archimedes screw and the relation between the surface and volume of a sphere and the circumscribing cylinder. >>Nicholas Copernicus - His theorized that the Sun was the fixed point around which the motions of the planets takes place. The Earth rotates around its axis once in a day and slow alterations in the direction of this axis cause the precession of the equinoxes. >>Michael Faraday - He stated the laws of electrolysis in 1833. >>John Dalton - He developed the atomic theory. >>Alessandro Volta - He invented the practical battery using cells of two types of metals. >>Louis Pasteur - Some of his works are: * separation of mirror image molecules and effect of polarized light * identification of the parasite that was killing silkworms
Frederick Beaumont was born on 1833-10-22.
Henry Frederick Beaumont was born in 1833.
William Danby died in 1833.
William Sotheby died in 1833.
William Cusins was born in 1833.
William Fogerty was born in 1833.
William Corby was born in 1833.
William Larnach was born in 1833.
William Redfern died in 1833-07.
William Morgan - actuary - died in 1833.
James William Elliott was born in 1833.
William B. Poole was born in 1833.