• Thumbnail for William Crawford Williamson
    William Crawford Williamson FRS (24 November 1816 – 23 June 1895) was an English Naturalist and Palaeobotanist. Williamson was born at Scarborough, North...
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  • William Crawford Williamson (1816–1895), English naturalist William D. Williamson (1779–1846), American, Governor of Maine, US Representative William...
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  • Thumbnail for Plant anatomy
    photosynthetic, etc.). British paleobotanists Dunkinfield Henry Scott and William Crawford Williamson described the structures of fossilized plants at the end of the...
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  • Thumbnail for Crawford Long
    Crawford Williamson Long (November 1, 1815 – June 16, 1878) was an American surgeon and pharmacist best known for his first use of inhaled sulfuric ether...
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  • Thumbnail for Bennettitales
    publications in 1870, Scottish botanist William Carruthers and English paleobotanist William Crawford Williamson described the first known reproductive...
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  • Thumbnail for Lawrence Bragg
    Sir William Lawrence Bragg, CH, OBE, MC, FRS (31 March 1890 – 1 July 1971) was an Australian-born British physicist and X-ray crystallographer, discoverer...
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  • Thumbnail for Williamsonia (plant)
    Williamsonia was originally described as Zamia gigas by William Crawford Williamson. William Carruthers proposed the name Williamsonia in 1870, with the...
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  • Thumbnail for John Dalton
    Edinburgh: William F. Clay. Retrieved 24 December 2007.– Alembic Club reprint with some of Dalton's papers, along with some by William Hyde Wollaston...
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  • Williamson was born in Manchester in 1856, the son of Prof. William Crawford Williamson of Owens College. His mother was Sophia Wood daughter of Sarah...
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  • Thumbnail for James Prescott Joule
    the famous scientist John Dalton and was strongly influenced by chemist William Henry and Manchester engineers Peter Ewart and Eaton Hodgkinson. He was...
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  • Thumbnail for Wollaston Medal
    1888 Henry Benedict Medlicott 1889 Thomas George Bonney 1890 William Crawford Williamson 1891 John Wesley Judd 1892 Ferdinand von Richthofen 1893 Nevil...
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  • since 1851 when William Crawford Williamson (1816–1896) was appointed as professor of natural history, anatomy and physiology. Williamson originally taught...
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  • Thumbnail for Henry Roscoe (chemist)
    (1800–1836) and Maria Roscoe, née Fletcher (1798–1885), and grandson of William Roscoe (1753–1831). Stanley Jevons the Australian economist was a cousin...
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  • William Henry Harvey, Miles Joseph Berkeley, Joseph Henry Gilbert, William Crawford Williamson, Harry Marshall Ward and Joseph Dalton Hooker. In late 1935 he...
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  • Thumbnail for William Fairbairn
    Sir William Fairbairn, 1st Baronet of Ardwick Bt FRS (19 February 1789 – 18 August 1874) was a Scottish civil engineer, structural engineer and shipbuilder...
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  • Thumbnail for Michael Polanyi
    net. Government Online. 15 January 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2018. Scott, William T.; Moleski, Martin X. (2005). Michael Polanyi: scientist and philosopher...
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  • many of the foremost British naturalists: Thomas Henry Huxley, William Crawford Williamson, John Blackwall, Albert Günther, James Scott Bowerbank, etc....
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  • Thumbnail for Crawford expedition
    conflict. The campaign was led by Colonel William Crawford, a former officer in the U.S. Continental Army. Crawford's goal was to destroy enemy Native American...
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  • Thumbnail for Gristhorpe Man
    was published in the same year by the precocious 17-year-old William Crawford Williamson, the son of the Museum curator. They were taken to Bradford in...
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  • Wilken (born 1944) Wilkes – Charles Wilkes (1798–1877) Will. – William Crawford Williamson (1816–1895) Willd. – Carl Ludwig von Willdenow (1765–1812) Wille...
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  • Thumbnail for Horace Lamb
    Joule (IV) Edward William Binney (IV) Sir Henry Enfield Roscoe William Crawford Williamson Robert Dukinfield Darbishire Balfour Stewart Osborne Reynolds...
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  • Thumbnail for Osborne Reynolds
    principles to friction drag computations, along with a proper application of William Froude's theories of gravity wave energy and propagation. Reynolds himself...
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  • the first issue include Thomas Henry Huxley, Joseph Lister, William Crawford Williamson, and George Shadbolt. The contents of the early issues are diverse...
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  • described. Copley Medal: Simon Newcomb Wollaston Medal for Geology: William Crawford Williamson January 14 – Arthur Holmes (died 1965), English geologist. January...
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  • Thumbnail for Eric James, Baron James of Rusholme
    Joule (IV) Edward William Binney (IV) Sir Henry Enfield Roscoe William Crawford Williamson Robert Dukinfield Darbishire Balfour Stewart Osborne Reynolds...
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  • Chaim Weizmann, discovered how to use bacterial fermentation. William Crawford Williamson, natural historian and paleobotanist Derek Yalden, zoologist...
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  • Prescott Joule (IV) 1880–82 Edward William Binney (IV) 1882–84 Sir Henry Enfield Roscoe 1884–86 William Crawford Williamson 1886–87 Robert Dukinfield Darbishire...
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  • Thumbnail for Grafton Elliot Smith
    later became known as his theory of diffusionism. According to Smith and William James Perry, Egypt was the source of all cultural innovations and the ultimate...
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  • using Meccano. Douglas Hartree was born in Cambridge, England. His father, William, was a lecturer in engineering at the University of Cambridge and his mother...
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  • Thumbnail for Arthur Schuster
    Joule (IV) Edward William Binney (IV) Sir Henry Enfield Roscoe William Crawford Williamson Robert Dukinfield Darbishire Balfour Stewart Osborne Reynolds...
    20 KB (1,967 words) - 02:22, 31 December 2023