The year 1832 in
science and
technology involved some significant events, listed below.
Biology
Dr.
Thomas Bell begins publication of A Monograph of the Testudinata, the first comprehensive study of the world's
turtles.
Isidore Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire begins publication of Histoire générale et particulière des anomalies de l'organisation chez l'homme et les animaux, a key text on
teratology.[1]
July 19 –
Anatomy Act in the
United Kingdom provides for licensing and inspection of
anatomists, and for unclaimed bodies from public institutions to be available for their dissection.
James Rennell's An Investigation of the Currents of the Atlantic Ocean, and of those which prevail between the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic is published posthumously by his daughter. It will not be significantly superseded for more than a century.[10]
c. December – Following a paper by Faraday, Belgian physicist
Joseph Plateau and Austrian professor of practical geometry
Simon Stampfer simultaneously and independently devise the
phenakistiscope, an
animation device creating an optical illusion of motion.
^Rathbone, Herbert R. (1927), Memoir of Kitty Wilkinson of Liverpool, 1786-1860, H. Young & Sons
^Hellman, S. (2007). "Brief Consideration of Thomas Hodgkin and His Times". In Hoppe, R. T.; Mauch, P. T.; Armitage, J. O.; Diehl, V.; Weiss, L. M. (eds.). Hodgkin Lymphoma (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 3–6.
ISBN978-0-7817-6422-3.
^Hodgkin, T. (1832). "On some morbid experiences of the absorbent glands and spleen". Medico-Chirurgical Transactions. 17. London: 69–97.