1613 in science
Appearance
	
	
| List of years in science | 
|---|
| (table) | 
| 1613 in science | 
|---|
| Fields | 
| Technology | 
| Social sciences | 
| Paleontology | 
| Extraterrestrial environment | 
| Terrestrial environment | 
| Other/related | 
The year 1613 in science and technology involved some significant events.
Astronomy
[edit]- Galileo Galilei publishes Letters on Sunspots, the first major work on the topic.
 
Paleontology
[edit]- Bones, probably of an elephant, are found in France but at first interpreted to belong to a giant human.
 
Technology
[edit]- September 29 – The New River (engineered by Sir Hugh Myddelton) is opened to supply London with drinking water from Hertfordshire.[1]
 
Births
[edit]- March 6 – Stjepan Gradić, Ragusan polymath (died 1683)
 - September 25 – Claude Perrault, French architect and physicist (died 1688)
 
Deaths
[edit]- June 16 – Jakob Christmann, German orientalist and astronomer (born 1554)
 - July 2 – Bartholomaeus Pitiscus, German trigonometrist (born 1561)
 - August 25 – David Gans, German Jewish mathematician and astronomer (born 1541)
 - Mathew Baker, English shipwright (born 1530)
 - Johann Bauhin, Swiss physician and botanist (born 1541)
 - Jacques Guillemeau, French surgeon (born 1550)
 
References
[edit]- ^ Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 243–248. ISBN 0-304-35730-8.