1760 in science

The year 1760 in science and technology involved some significant events.

Chemistry

 * Louis Claude Cadet de Gassicourt investigates inks based on cobalt salts and isolates cacodyl from cobalt mineral containing arsenic, pioneering work in organometallic chemistry.

Geology

 * John Michell suggests earthquakes are caused by one layer of rocks rubbing against another.

Medicine

 * April 30 – Swiss mathematician Daniel Bernoulli presents a paper at the French Academy of Sciences in Paris in which "a mathematical model was used for the first time to study the population dynamics of infectious disease."
 * Samuel-Auguste Tissot publishes L'Onanisme in Lausanne, a treatise on the supposed ill-effects of masturbation.

Physics

 * Johann Heinrich Lambert publishes Photometria, a pioneering work in photometry, including a formulation of the Beer–Lambert law on light absorption and the introduction of the albedo as a reflection coefficient.

Events

 * Mathematician Leonhard Euler begins writing his Letters to a German Princess (Lettres à une princesse d'Allemagne sur divers sujets de physique et de philosophie) to Friederike Charlotte of Brandenburg-Schwedt and her younger sister Louise.

Awards

 * Copley Medal: Benjamin Wilson

Births

 * April 13 – Thomas Beddoes, reforming English physician (died 1808)
 * June 5 – Johan Gadolin, Finnish chemist and mineralogist (died 1852)
 * October 23 – Hanaoka Seishū, Japanese surgeon (died 1835)
 * Clelia Durazzo Grimaldi, Italian botanist (died 1830)

Deaths

 * September 11 – Louis Godin, French astronomer (born 1704)