Tag: History

  • From the archive: Tutankhamun’s coffin, and Darwin shares a letter

    From the archive: Tutankhamun’s coffin, and Darwin shares a letter

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    Nature, Published online: 20 February 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-00428-7

    Snippets from Nature’s past.

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  • The decimal point is 150 years older than historians thought

    The decimal point is 150 years older than historians thought

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    A Renaissance painting of Emperor Frederick III receiving the book Tabulae Astrologiae from the astronomer Giovanni Bianchini.

    Astronomer Giovanni Bianchini presenting Emperor Frederick III with his book Tabulae Astrologiae.Credit: Heritage Image Partnership Ltd/Alamy

    The decimal point was invented around 150 years earlier than previously thought, according to an analysis of astronomical tables compiled by the Italian merchant and mathematician Giovanni Bianchini in the 1440s. Historians say that this discovery rewrites the origins of one of most fundamental mathematical conventions, and suggests that Bianchini — whose economic training contrasted starkly with that of his astronomer peers — might have played more notable part in the history of maths than previously realized. The results are published in Historia Mathematica1.

    “It’s a very nice discovery,” says José Chabás, a historian of astronomy at the Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona, Spain. The decimal point was “a step forward for humanity”, he says, enabling ease and efficiency of calculations that underpin modern science and technology. Previously, its earliest-known appearance was generally said to be in an astronomical table written by the German mathematician Christopher Clavius in 1593. But now it’s clear that “the inspiration was taken from Bianchini”, Chabás says.

    Bianchini worked as a Venetian merchant before becoming an administrator of the estate of the powerful d’Este family, who ruled the Duchy of Ferrara at the time. As well as managing assets and guiding investments, Bianchini was responsible for casting horoscopes, which meant that he had to master astronomy. He published several works on topics ranging from planetary motions to predicting eclipses.

    Glen Van Brummelen, a historian of mathematics at Trinity Western University in Langley, Canada, had hoped that Bianchini’s work might help to reveal how and when Islamic astronomical knowledge reached Europe. As a merchant, “Bianchini would have travelled all over the place, so it seems natural that he might have found something in Islamic science in his journeys and used that as an inspiration”, says Van Brummelen. But instead, “it seems a lot of things he did were simply out of his own incredibly creative mind”.

    Tricky divisions

    At the time of Bianchini, European astronomers were exclusively using the sexagesimal (base 60) system inherited from the Babylonians. The sexagesimal system is still in use today for writing latitudes and longitudes, both celestial and terrestrial. It divides a full circle into 360 degrees, each degree into 60 minutes, and each minute into 60 seconds. But it’s difficult to carry out operations such as multiplication with sexagesimal numbers. Astronomers would have to convert a value into the smallest unit to do the calculation, for example, and then convert back afterwards.

    Traders and accountants, on the other hand, were taught to calculate using real-world weights and measures, in which units could be divided in a variety of ways: there are twelve inches in a foot, for example, and three feet in a yard. To enable simpler calculations, Bianchini invented his own decimal scheme, describing a system for measuring distances in which a foot was divided into ten equal parts called untie, each of which was divided into ten minuta, and then into ten secunda. This didn’t catch on, and his penchant for base 10 wasn’t previously thought to have influenced his astronomy.

    But, in poring over a treatise that Bianchini wrote in the 1440s, called Tabulae primi mobilis B, Van Brummelen realized that in places he was using not only a decimal number system, but also a decimal point like the one we use today.

    Van Brummelen made the discovery while teaching at a maths camp for middle schoolers. One evening, he was discussing the Tabulae with a colleague over Zoom, trying to translate Bianchini’s dense medieval Latin. They came across a passage in which Bianchini introduces a number “with a dot in the middle” — 10.4 — and shows how to multiply it by 8. “I realized that he’s using this just as we do, and he knows how to do calculations with it,” says Van Brummelen. “I remember running up and down the hallways of the dorm with my computer trying to find anybody who was awake, shouting ‘look at this, this guy is doing decimal points in the 1440s!’”

    The second page of Bianchini's decimal tangent table, showing decimal points in the interpolation columns.

    A trigonometric table showing decimal points, from Bianchini’s Tabulae primi mobilis B.Credit: Van Brummelen, G./Historia Mathematica

    The key part of the manuscript is a series of trigonometric tables, including a sine table. Astronomers at the time used spherical trigonometry to calculate the positions of celestial bodies on the surface of a sphere. Bianchini still divides angles into minutes and seconds, but gives the sines — which astronomers interpreted as distances — decimals, with tenths, hundredths and thousandths. He introduces his decimal point when stating the amount that the user should add or subtract to calculate values that fall between one entry and the next. Tellingly, this is exactly how Clavius uses his decimal point in 1593. Historians have always wondered why Clavius never mentions the innovation again. “Why would you invent something that’s clearly so powerful and then just drop it?” asks Van Brummelen. But the advance fits perfectly with Bianchini’s broader work. Van Brummelen concludes that Clavius must have appropriated the decimal point from his predecessor. “It’s impossible that he didn’t know about Bianchini,” agrees Chabás.

    Pointing forward

    The beauty of the decimal system, says Sarah Hart, a historian of mathematics at Birkbeck, University of London, is that it makes non-whole numbers as easy to calculate with as whole ones. There’s no need for “all this malarkey that you have to do with fractions”, she says. “With a decimal point you can use the same process on numbers of any size.”

    Van Brummelen suggests that Bianchini’s schooling in economics might have been key to his invention, as he wasn’t embedded in sexagesimal numbers from early in his career, as other astronomers were. But his approach was perhaps too revolutionary to catch on at first. “In order to understand what Bianchini was doing, you had to learn a completely new system of arithmetic,” he says.

    A century and a half later, however, “decimal notation was in the air”. Astronomers working with smaller and smaller subdivisions were inventing different systems, desperate for ways to simplify complex calculations. Clavius’s work influenced later popularizers of decimal fractions, such as Flemish mathematician Simon Stevin, as well as Scottish astronomer and inventor of logarithms John Napier, who adopted the decimal point. Chabás argues that historians should reassess Bianchini’s importance. Although he has been “eclipsed” by other figures, there’s clearly “a path of ideas”, he says, leading back to Bianchini.

    The implications of the invention have spread far beyond astronomy. Decimal fractions have enabled and inspired scientists to pin down nature with much greater precision, says Hart, and raise ideas that weren’t even possible before, such as that “of a number that goes on forever and never stops”. She notes that the power of the decimal point relied on other developments, including the arrival of Hindu–Arabic numerals in Europe a few centuries earlier — largely through the work of Leonardo Pisano, known as Fibonacci — and the gradual introduction of a symbol for zero. Bianchini’s story illustrates the “constant cross-fertilisation” between practical needs, number systems and theoretical ideas, she says, and his well-placed dot has changed how we see the world.

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  • From the archive: lonely cells, and Thomas Henry Huxley backs evolution

    From the archive: lonely cells, and Thomas Henry Huxley backs evolution

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    Nature, Published online: 06 February 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-00235-0

    Snippets from Nature’s past.

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  • Ancient Herculaneum scroll piece revealed by AI – here’s what it says

    Ancient Herculaneum scroll piece revealed by AI – here’s what it says

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    The winners of the Vesuvius Challenge grand prize used technology to decipher a damaged papyrus scroll

    Vesuvius Challenge

    Artificial intelligence has helped decipher an ancient papyrus scroll, which was transformed into a lump of blackened carbon by volcanic ash from Mount Vesuvius in AD 79. The first passages of readable text reveal never-before-seen musings from a Greek philosopher.

    The discovery nabbed the $700,000 grand prize in the Vesuvius Challenge, and used a combination of 3D mapping and AI techniques to detect ink and decipher letter shapes within segments of scrolls known as the Herculaneum papyri, which had been digitally scanned. The combined efforts of the winning team members – Youssef Nader, Luke Farritor and Julian Schilliger – could pave the way for more discoveries from additional papyrus scrolls that were once housed in a library in the ancient Roman town of Herculaneum.

    “I think it’s going to be a huge boon to our knowledge of ancient philosophy, just gigantic – a staggering amount of new text,” says Michael McOsker at the University College London, who was not involved in the discovery.

    The winning submission met the Vesuvius Challenge criteria of deciphering more than 85 per cent of characters in four passages consisting of 140 characters each – and as a bonus, it included another 11 columns of text for a total of more than 2000 characters.

    Those rediscovered Greek letters reveal the thoughts of Philodemus, who is thought to have been the philosopher-in-residence at the library that housed the Herculaneum papyri. The deciphered text focuses on how the scarcity or abundance of food and other goods impacts the pleasure they deliver. That fits Philodemus’s Epicurean school of philosophy, which prioritised pleasure as the main goal in life. His 2000-year-old writing even appears to possibly take a dig at the Stoic school of philosophy that has “nothing to say about pleasure”.

    And the Vesuvius Challenge isn’t over. Its 2024 goals include figuring out how to scale up the 3D scanning and digital analysis techniques without becoming too expensive. The current techniques cost $100 per square centimetre, meaning that it could cost between $1 million and $5 million to virtually unroll an entire scroll – and there are 800 scrolls waiting to be deciphered.

    “Realistically, the vast majority of the known, already unrolled library is Epicurean philosophy and that’s what we should expect, but there are also important Stoic texts, maybe some history and some Latin literature. Complete texts of authors like Ennius or Livius Andronicus, early Roman authors [whose works] did not survive, would be great,” says McOsker. “Epicurus’s Symposium, in which he wrote about the biology of wine consumption, would be a lot of fun.”

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  • Building used by Marie Curie will be dismantled to erect cancer centre

    Building used by Marie Curie will be dismantled to erect cancer centre

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    Marie Curie (1867 - 1934) photographed in her laboratory.

    French-Polish chemist Marie Skłodowska-Curie discovered radium and later used radioactivity to treat patients at the Radium Institute in Paris.Credit: Hulton-Deutsch Collection/Corbis via Getty

    A row over a building once used by chemist Marie Skłodowska-Curie has been resolved following negotiations between the French culture ministry and a group of scientists who want to demolish the site to build a leading cancer-research centre.

    The resolution, announced on 31 January, will allow the scientists at the Curie Institute in Paris, one of France’s premier biomedical-research institutes, to build their €13-million cancer centre on the site. The Pavillon des Sources — one of three buildings of the historic Radium Institute, and where Curie and others prepared samples — will be dismantled, decontaminated and reconstructed nearby.

    “It is a wonderful news as we will be able to move forward with the development of chemical biology at Institut Curie, while preserving the rich heritage of Marie Curie,” says Raphaël Rodriguez, a chemical biologist at the Curie Institute who is set to co-direct the new centre.

    The row over the future of the Pavillon des Sources, in Paris’s ritzy 5th district, drew global media attention last month after a social-media campaign by heritage protectors said that “Marie Curie’s lab” was to be destroyed. The campaign caught the attention of the French culture ministry, which abruptly halted the demolition on 5 January.

    Not Curie’s lab

    The Curie Institute scientists, who had won planning permission for the new research centre from Paris authorities, say that the media campaign misrepresented the old building’s scientific significance. Curie and others used the Pavillon des Sources to store radioactive sources and to prepare samples for research. It was built between 1911 and 1914 after Curie won her Nobel prizes in physics in 1903 and chemistry in 1911, and was not an experimental lab when she did that foundational research. Although unlikely to still be radioactive, the Pavillon des Sources has long been locked down by the French atomic-safety authority and people are not allowed inside.

    Curie founded the Radium Institute, which later evolved into the Curie Institute, to use chemistry and the knowledge of radioactivity to treat patients. The Radium Institute’s other two buildings, including the chemist’s former lab, the Pavillon Curie — which is a museum — and the Pavillon Pasteur, remain untouched.

    The fenced-off exterior of the Pavillon des Sources building at the Institut Curie in Paris.

    The Pavillon des Sources in Paris housed radioactive sources for research, and has long been locked down by the French atomic-safety authority.Credit: Abdullah Firas/ABACA/Shutterstock

    “Her lab is still there, it is maintained, we are not going to touch it,” says Rodriguez. “So claiming that Marie Curie’s lab is going to be destroyed is just fake information.”

    In a press release announcing the compromise, French culture minister Rachida Dati said: “The Pavillon des Sources will be preserved. It will be dismantled and reassembled stone by stone a few dozen metres away, adjacent to the museum, which will then be enlarged.”

    “Supporting tomorrow’s research means respecting the great researchers and constantly striving to extend their research approaches,” says Dati’s statement.

    Crucial chemical biology

    The proposed Chemical Biology of Cancer Centre has been in planning for five years and is modelled on the prominent Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York City, which has both research labs and patient-treatment facilities. Researchers at the institute will harness chemical biology — the solving of biological problems by chemical means — to treat cancer.

    It’s fantastic news that scientists and authorities have found a solution to build the centre, says Ángela Nieto, a cell and cancer biologist at the Neuroscience Institute at Miguel Hernandez University in Elche, Spain. “I fully agree with the importance and opportunity of establishing a new institute on chemical biology at Curie. I do not have any doubt that this will strengthen a crucial aspect of research.”

    The centre’s proximity to the Curie Institute, where there is a hospital and basic-research institute, is essential to its success, says Rodriguez, who thinks it will be the first of its kind in Europe. “You blend within the same building chemists, cell biologists and clinicians and it makes a huge difference when you have breakfast, lunch and dinner with your colleagues,” he says. “This is where you exchange ideas. And that’s a way to bridge the gap between disciplines.”

    For example, oncologists treating patients can consult chemists on site, who can immediately take samples of a patient’s tumour and see whether a compound they have synthesized kills the cancer cells in the lab. Modern chemical biology is a natural evolution of Curie’s work, says Rodriguez. The new institute bridges the gap to cell biology.

    “By doing cutting-edge research, we are maintaining the rich legacy of Marie Curie’s excellence in research and medicine,” says Rodriguez.

    Additional reporting by Barbara Casassus.

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