Read Coming of Age in the Milky Way Online
Authors: Timothy Ferris
Tags: #Science, #Philosophy, #Space and time, #Cosmology, #Science - History, #Astronomy, #Metaphysics, #History
Time
: 11 million years
Noteworthy Events
: Grazing animals proliferate.
Time
: 5 million years
Noteworthy Events
: Apeman diverges from chimpanzee family.
Time
: 3.7 million years
Noteworthy Events
: Apemen walk upright.
Time
: 3.5 million years
Noteworthy Events
: Onset of latest series of ice ages.
Time
: 1.8–1.7 million years
Noteworthy Events
:
Homo erectas
, “first true man,” in China.
Time
: 600,000 years
Noteworthy Events
:
Homo sapiens
emerges.
Time
: 360,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Controlled use of fire common among genus
Homo
.
Time
: 150,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Woolly mammoth roam.
Time
: 100,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Stars take on the forms of the recognizable modern constellations.
Time
: 40,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Invention of complex language; modern humans flourish.
Time
: 35,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Neanderthal man disappears. First musical instruments are crafted.
Time
: 20,000–15,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Agriculture invented.
Time
: 19,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Peopling of the Americas begins.
Time
: 18,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Animals are herded by humans.
Time
: 14,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Invention of fishhooks.
Time
: 13,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Development of ceramic pottery.
Time
: 10,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Cultivation of wheat, rice begins.
Time
: 6,700 years
Noteworthy Events
: Early Babylonian calendar in use.
Time
: 6,200 years
Noteworthy Events
: Refined solar calendar employed.
Time
: 6,500 years
Noteworthy Events
: Copper is smelted.
Time
: 5,600 years
Noteworthy Events
: First taxes.
Time
:
5,500 years
BP (= 3,500 BC)
Noteworthy Events
: Development of writing.
Time
: 3,600–3,400 BC
Noteworthy Events
: Cotton cultivated in Peru, Mexico.
Time
: 2,500 years
Noteworthy Events
: Stonehenge built.
Time
: 2,200 years
Noteworthy Events
: Systematic astronomy in Egypt, Babylonia, India, China.
Time
: 1,500 years
Noteworthy Events
: Sundial invented, in Egypt.
Time
: 1,000 years
Noteworthy Events
: Homer declaims the
Odyssey
.
Time
: 800 years
Noteworthy Events
: Olmec culture in Mexico.
Time
: 700 years
Noteworthy Events
: Hesiod,
Works and Days
.
Time
: 650 years
Noteworthy Events
: Mayan culture in Guatemala.
Time
: 600 years
Noteworthy Events
: Lao-tzu, Confucius, Buddha, Zoroaster; Old Testament in Hebrew.
Time
: 540 years
Noteworthy Events
: Pythagoras teaches that “all is number” and that nature is harmonious.
Time
: 450 years
Noteworthy Events
: Leucippus and Democritus propose that matter is made of indivisible entities, the atoms. Paradoxes of Zeno raise doubts about the concept of the infinitesimal.
Time
: 400 years
Noteworthy Events
: Plato teaches that the material world is but a shadow of a geometrically perfect reality. Aristotle, Eudoxus, theorize that universe is composed of crystalline spheres centered on Earth.
Time
: 300 years
Noteworthy Events
: Euclid’s geometry marries mathematical perfection to the world of experience.
Time
: 260 years
Noteworthy Events
: Aristarchus of Samos hypothesizes that the earth orbits the sun in a gigantic universe.
Time
: 100 years
Noteworthy Events
: Chinese seafarers reach the east coast of India.
Time
: 60 BC
Noteworthy Events
: Lucretius writes
De Rerum Natura (On the Nature of Things)
, espousing Epicurean cosmology.
Time
: AD 100
Noteworthy Events
: Claudius Ptolemy constructs a complex geocentric cosmological model that “saves the appearances”—i.e., makes reasonably accurate predictions at the expense of claims to represent physical reality.
Time
: 325
Noteworthy Events
: Eusebius, chairman of the Council of Nicaea convened by the emperor Constantine, estimates that the world was created 3,184 years prior to the birth of Abraham.
Time
:
400
Noteworthy Events
: Middle or Dark Ages begin; science dormant in the West.
Time
: 455
Noteworthy Events
: Vandals sack Rome.
Time
: 963
Noteworthy Events
: Al Sufi, in his
Book of the Fixed Stars
, mentions nebulae.
Time
: 1001
Noteworthy Events
: Leif Ericsson reaches New England.
Time
: 1276–1292
Noteworthy Events
: Marco Polo in Hangchow.
Time
: 1400
Noteworthy Events
: Renaissance of learning commences in Europe.
Time
: 1492
Noteworthy Events
: Columbus (re)discovers America.
Time
: 1521
Noteworthy Events
: Cortez takes Mexico.
Time
: 1522
Noteworthy Events
: Survivors of Magellan’s final expedition complete circumnavigation of the globe.
Time
: 1523
Noteworthy Events
: Pizarro takes Peru.
Time
: 1543
Noteworthy Events
: Copernicus’s
On the Revolutions
published.
Time
: 1572
Noteworthy Events
: Tycho sees a nova (or “new star”) in the sky, evidence against Aristotle’s theory that the realm of the stars is unchanging and therefore unlike that of the earth.
Time
: 1576
Noteworthy Events
: Thomas Digges in England publishes a defense of the Copernican cosmology in which he portrays the stars as distributed throughout infinite space.
Time
: 1604
Noteworthy Events
: Galileo proposes that bodies fall with a uniformly accelerated motion, thus enunciating the first of the laws of classical dynamics.
Noteworthy Events
: Kepler and Galileo observe a supernova.
Time
: 1609
Noteworthy Events
: Galileo first observes the night sky through a telescope.
Noteworthy Events
: Kepler demonstrates that the orbits of the planets are elliptical.
Time
: 1611
Noteworthy Events
: Edition of the King James Bible published containing an estimate by James Ussher, bishop of Armagh, that “the beginning of time … fell on the beginning of the night which preceded the 23 rd day of October, in the year … 4004
B.C.
”
Time
: 1616
Noteworthy Events
: Roman Catholic Church bans all books that maintain that the earth moves.
Time
: 1639
Noteworthy Events
: Transit of Venus observed by two English amateur astronomers.
Time
: 1662
Noteworthy Events
: Royal Society chartered in London.
Time
: 1665–1666
Noteworthy Events
: Isaac Newton, age twenty-three, home from college, realizes
that gravitational force obeying an inverse-square law would account alike for falling bodies on earth and the motion of the moon in its orbit.
Time
: 1666
Noteworthy Events
: Newton observes spectrum produced by sunlight when shown through a prism.
Time
: 1672
Noteworthy Events
: Opposition of Mars widely observed, by Richer at Cayenne and Cassini in Paris among others, leading to estimates of the distance from the earth to the sun of some eighty-one to eighty-seven million miles—90 percent of the correct value.
Time
: 1675
Noteworthy Events
: Olaus Römer determines, from studying the satellites of Jupiter, that light has a finite velocity.
Time
: 1684
Noteworthy Events
: Edmond Halley visits Isaac Newton at Trinity College, resurrects line of research that leads Newton to write the
Principia
.
Time
: 1686
Noteworthy Events
: Bernard de Fontenelle’s
Entretiens sur la Plurality des Mondes
popularizes the idea that the universe contains many inhabited worlds.
Time
: 1687
Noteworthy Events
: Newton’s
Principia
published.
Time
: 1716
Noteworthy Events
: Halley urges that future transit of Venus may be observed and timed in order to triangulate interplanetary distances.
Time
: 1718
Noteworthy Events
: Halley finds that the bright stars Sirius, Aldebaran, Betelgeuse, and Arcturus have changed their position in the sky since Ptolemy’s
Almagest
was compiled—first evidence of the “proper motion” of stars.
Time
: 1719
Noteworthy Events
: John Strachey in England publishes notes on strata in the coal-rich district of Somerset, an early step in the establishment of geological science.
Time
: 1728
Noteworthy Events
: James Bradley finds aberration in starlight produced by the motion of the earth.
Time
: 1750–1784
Noteworthy Events
: French amateur astronomer Charles Messier catalogs scores of indistinct celestial objects that might be mistaken for comets; many will prove to be star clusters and interstellar gas clouds, others external galaxies.
Time
: 1755
Noteworthy Events
: Kant proposes that spiral nebulae are galaxies of stars.
Time
: 1761, 1769
Noteworthy Events
: Transits of Venus observed by widely scattered scientific expeditions, permitting new determinations of the distance from the earth to the sun—the “astronomical unit.”
Time
:
1765
Noteworthy Events
: John Harrison is acknowledged by the English Board of Longitude to have developed the marine chronometer, making possible accurate timekeeping and the determination of longitude at sea.
Time
: 1766
Noteworthy Events
: Henry Cavendish identifies hydrogen, the most abundant element in the universe.
Time
: 1781
Noteworthy Events
: William Herschel discovers the planet Uranus.
Time
: 1783
Noteworthy Events
: Herschel derives the general direction of the solar system’s motion through space, by studying the proper motion of thirteen bright stars.
Time
: 1793
Noteworthy Events
: William Smith, a canal surveyor and consulting engineer excavating the Somersetshire Coal Canal, finds evidence for a consistent sequence of geological strata throughout England.
Time
: 1795
Noteworthy Events
: James Hutton’s
Theory of the Earth
advances a uniformitarian hypothesis of geological change having taken place in the course of a lengthy past.
Time
: 1800
Noteworthy Events
: William Herschel detects infrared light.
Time
: 1801
Noteworthy Events
: Johann Ritter detects ultraviolet light.
Noteworthy Events
: Georges Cuvier identifies twenty-three species of extinct animals in the fossil record, confounding the doctrine that all species were created simultaneously and are imperishable.