1733 in science

The year 1733 in science and technology involved some significant events.

Physiology and medicine

 * Rev. Stephen Hales publishes Hæmastaticks, the second volume of his Statical Essays, in London, containing the results of his experiments in measuring blood pressure.

Inventions

 * May 26 – The flying shuttle loom is patented by John Kay, making weaving faster and increasing demand for yarn.
 * The perambulator or pram (a baby carriage) is invented by English architect William Kent for children of the 3rd Duke of Devonshire.
 * The achromatic refracting lens is invented by English barrister Chester Moore Hall.

Mathematics

 * Giovanni Gerolamo Saccheri studies what geometry would be like if the parallel postulate (Euclid's fifth) were false.
 * Abraham de Moivre introduces the normal distribution to approximate the binomial distribution in probability.

Births

 * January 18 – Kaspar Friedrich Wolff, German surgeon and physiologist (died 1794)
 * February 19 – Daniel Solander, Swedish botanist (died 1782)
 * March 13 – Joseph Priestley, English chemist (died 1804)
 * March 17 – Carsten Niebuhr, Danish cartographer, surveyor and traveller (died 1815)
 * May 4 – Jean-Charles de Borda, French mathematician, physicist, political scientist, and sailor (died 1799)
 * May 22 – Alexander Monro, Scottish anatomist (died 1817)
 * July 27 – Jeremiah Dixon, English surveyor and astronomer (died 1779)

Deaths

 * June 23 – Johann Jakob Scheuchzer, Swiss natural historian (born 1672)