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earliest and pioneers
The film was produced by the Edison Manufacturing Company, which had begun making films in 1890 under the direction of one of the earliest pioneers to film William K. L.
After the Lewis and Clark Expedition of the early 19th century, white settlers came to the area, many from Kentucky, Tennessee and the Carolinas ; the earliest pioneers appeared to have settled as early as 1818, and the town of Waynesville was designated the county seat by the Missouri Legislature in 1833.
The earliest pioneers came from Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, and the Carolinas.
The land that now makes up Glasco was part of a land grant from the U. S. Government to Isaac Biggs, one of the earliest pioneers.
According to The History of Ontario County New York, some of the earliest pioneers included " Daniel Gates, Daniel Warner, Ezra Platt, Samuel Day, George Chapin, Israel Chapin, Jr., Frederick Follett, Thomas Sawyer, Benjamin Wells and Mr. Sweet, all of whom were from Massachusetts, while William Wyckoff who was another pioneer, was from Pennsylvania.
It was named by Mrs. Thomas Burbank, wife of one of the earliest pioneers, who settled south of the city.
Ibn Ezra is claimed by the proponents of the higher biblical criticism of the Pentateuch as one of its earliest pioneers.
One of the earliest Brazilian pioneers, Augusto de Campos, has assembled a Web site of old and new work ( see external links below ), including the manifesto.
Two of the earliest pioneers were Frenchmen Eugène Pirou and Albert Kirchner.
Random methods of computation and experimentation ( generally considered forms of stochastic simulation ) can be arguably traced back to the earliest pioneers of probability theory ( see, e. g., Buffon's needle, and the work on small samples by William Sealy Gosset ), but are more specifically traced to the pre-electronic computing era.
Another journal of the period, Flight, credited him with a hop of five meters on October 8, 1906, as the earliest entry in a list of his tests shown in a table of " the performances which have been made " by a number of aviation pioneers.
In the late 1940s, the duo created the field of romance comics, and were among the earliest pioneers of horror comics.
Boolos was one of its earliest proponents and pioneers, and he produced the first book-length treatment of it, The Unprovability of Consistency, published in 1979.
169 images by Thomas Prosch, one of Seattle's earliest pioneers, documenting the early history of Seattle and vicinity, c. 1851-1906.
The Arab Islamic philosophers, Ibn Tufail ( Abubacer ) and Ibn al-Nafis, were pioneers of the philosophical novel as they wrote the earliest novels dealing with philosophical fiction.
Several of its earliest members, including William Bartram, John Godman, Richard Harlan, Charles Alexandre Lesueur, William Maclure, Titian Peale, Charles Pickering, Thomas Say, and Alexander Wilson were among the pioneers or recognized authorities in their respective areas of study.
While the style was anticipated by the Melvins from Washington, many of its earliest pioneers were from the city of New Orleans.
One of the earliest pioneers of trampoline as a competitive sport was Jeff Hennessy, a coach at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.
The finds are dated to c. 8300-8200 calBP ( slightly later than the earliest Komsa Phase 1 finds ) and indicate that the first pioneers of the inland area of northern Lapland came from the south-east.
The project was conceived in 1876 by Anthony and Stanton when they realized that the earliest pioneers of the women's movement were passing on or would soon be.
The earliest forms of photogravure were developed in the 1830s by the original pioneers of photography itself, Henry Fox Talbot in England and Nicéphore Niépce in France.
** Prosch Seattle Views Album 169 images by Thomas Prosch, one of Seattle's earliest pioneers, documenting the early history of Seattle and vicinity, ca.
1858-1903 ) collected and annotated by Thomas Prosch, one of Seattle's earliest pioneers.
Salvochea is considered one of the earliest pioneers in the propagation and organization along anarchist lines.

earliest and chemistry
The earliest structures were simple inorganic crystals and minerals, but even these revealed fundamental laws of physics and chemistry.
Although one could argue that even the earliest analytical experiments in chemistry involved a form of chemometrics, the field is generally recognized to have emerged in the 1970s as computers became increasingly exploited for scientific investigation.
An exact and conscientious worker, he did much to improve and systematize the processes of analytical chemistry and mineralogy, and his appreciation of the value of quantitative methods led him to become one of the earliest adherents of the Lavoisierian doctrines outside France.

earliest and scientific
Various atoms and molecules as depicted in John Dalton's A New System of Chemical Philosophy ( 1808 ), one of the earliest scientific works on atomic theory
Some of the earliest attempts to apply scientific methods to the study of phenomena relating to an afterlife were conducted by this organization.
He presented his rational and scientific arguments in the form of Arabic fiction, hence his Theologus Autodidactus may be considered amongst the earliest science fiction work.
His earliest scientific work is related to spinels and other minerals.
Christiaan Huygens ( 1657 ) gave the earliest known scientific treatment of the subject.
One of the earliest voyages of scientific exploration was organized by Spain in the Malaspina Expedition of 1789-1794.
Cros was a poet of meager means, not in a position to pay a machinist to build a working model, and largely content to bequeath his ideas to the public domain free of charge and let others reduce them to practice, but after the earliest reports of Edison's presumably independent invention crossed the Atlantic he had his sealed letter of April 30 opened and read at the December 3, 1877 meeting of the French Academy of Sciences, claiming due scientific credit for priority of conception.
He is sometimes credited, mainly starting in the 19th century, as one of the earliest European advocates of the modern scientific method inspired by the works of Aristotle and later pseudo-Aristotelian works, like the works of Muslim scientist Alhazen.
The earliest scientific paper recorded in the MEDLINE database as containing the specific term signal transduction was published in 1972.
Although this concept of the circulatory system is greatly flawed, it represents one of the earliest accounts of scientific thought.
The earliest mention of a confirmed ALC / domestic cross was in 1934 in a Belgian scientific journal, and in 1941, a Japanese cat publication printed an article about one that was kept as a pet.
The English physician Sir Thomas Browne ( 1605 – 82 ) was one of the earliest scientists to adhere to the scientific empiricism of the Baconian method.
The earliest scientific surveys in France were called the Cassini maps after the family who produced them over four generations.
Astronomical photography is one of the earliest types of scientific photography and almost from its inception it diversified into subdisciplines that each have a specific goal including star cartography, astrometry, stellar classification, photometry, spectroscopy, polarimetry, and the discovery of astronomical objects such as asteroids, meteors, comets, variable stars, novae, and even unknown planets.
His scientific interests are attested by his letter to Hypatia, in which occurs the earliest known reference to a hydrometer, and by a work on alchemy in the form of a commentary on pseudo-Democritus.
The discipline of documentation science, which marks the earliest theoretical foundations of modern information science, emerged in the late part of the 19th Century in Europe together with several more scientific indexes whose purpose was to organize scholarly literature.
A brief tract on comic metres ( De comicis dimensionibus ) and a work De causis linguae Latinae ( Lyon, 1540 ; Geneva, 1580 ), which was the earliest Latin grammar founded on scientific principles and following a scientific method, were his only other purely literary works published in his lifetime.
He presented his rational and scientific arguments in the form of Arabic fiction, hence his Theologus Autodidactus may be considered the earliest science fiction work.
Notably, his efforts represent one of the earliest attempts to combine the scientific understanding and reasoning of the West with the Buddhist religion of the East.
The earliest usage of the term ' scientific romance ' is thought to be in 1845, by critics describing Robert Chambers ' Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, a speculative natural history published in 1844, and was used again in 1851 by the Edinburgh Ecclesiastical Journal and Literary Review in reference to Thoman Hunt's Panthea, or the Spirit of Nature.
One of the earliest writers to be described in this way was French astronomer and writer Camille Flammarion, whose Recits de l ' infini and La fin du monde have both been described as scientific romances.
Walter Cannon and Hans Selye used animal studies to establish the earliest scientific basis for the study of stress.
The earliest scientific observation and study dates to the 1880s ; the determination and observation of plant hormones and their identification was spread-out over the next 70 years.

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