Life Sciences
by Derek Gerlach
3 billion years ago
Algae in the water
Single-celled water creatures, such as algae, begin the 2-billion-year process of evolving into slightly more complex forms of life
1 billion years ago
Sponges and jellyfish in sea
Sponges and jellyfish drift in the sea, to be joined later by more purposeful shrimps and lobsters
500 million years ago
Fishes get skeletons
The earliest known creature with a skeleton evolves as a form of fish
400 million years ago
Plants get out of the water
Plants, previously living only in the seas and rivers, begin to establish themselves on land
350 million years ago
Insects are up and away
Insects become the first creatures capable of living their full life span out of the water - and the first to master flight
340 million years ago
Amphibians get lungs
Amphibians develop lungs, enabling them to live on land as well as in the water
300 million years ago
Reptiles rule
Reptiles develop evolutionary advantages for adaptation to a wide range of environments
225 million years ago
Dinosaurs inherit the earth
The dinosaurs dominate the planet in a way that no previous creature has been able to
170 million years ago
First tiny mammals
Mammals begin to make their appearance
125 million years ago
Birds appear on the scene
Primitive birds begin to feature in the fossil record
65 million years ago
Dinosaurs die out
In a very short space of time the dinosaurs die out, for reasons as yet uncertain
65 million years ago
Mammals in many forms
Mammals evolve in many new forms on land and in the water, using opportunities made possible by the extinction of the dinosaurs
45 million years ago
Primates in the trees
Primates evolve, from lemur-like animals to monkeys
15 million years ago
Large primates happy at ground level
A primate of this period, at ease both in the trees and on the ground, is probably the common ancestor of gorillas, chimpanzees and humans
6 million years ago
Apes walk tall
Various species of ape develop the habit of walking upright on two feet
4.5m. years ago
First hominids
Certain primates, in eastern and southern Africa, are by now sufficiently like humans to be classed as hominids
3.2 million years ago
Lucy in Ethiopia
A female of the species Australopithecus Afarensis (nicknamed Lucy when her skeleton is found), lives in the Afar Depression in Ethiopia within 50 miles of where her predecessor Ardi was unearthed
2.2 million years ago
First humans in east Africa
Creatures of the genus Homo, classified as early modern humans, are living in east Africa
570 BC
Anaximander on how it all began
Anaximander, a pupil of Thales, develops bold theories about the formation of the earth and the beginning of life
380 BC
Four humours in human body say Greeks
A Greek text, attributed to Polybus, argues that the human body is composed of four humours
300 BC
Earliest work on botany
The Greek author Theophrastus writes On the History of Plants, the earliest surviving work on botany
1530
Printed illustrations of botany
German botanist Otto Brunfels publishes Living images of plants, the first serious work of natural history with printed illustrations
1560
Tobacco good for you - official
Tobacco is grown in Europe's physic gardens for its medicinal qualities
1596
Swiss botanist classifies plants
Swiss botanist Gaspard Bauhin begins work classifying 6000 plants on a new binomial system of nomenclature
1661
Malpighi sees smallest blood vessels
Italian doctor Marcello Malpighi discovers the capillaries, thus completing the evidence for the circulation of the blood
1674
Leeuwenhoek observes red blood corpuscles
The Dutch scientist Anton van Leeuwenhoek builds a microscope powerful enough for him to observe and describe the red corpuscles in blood
1677
Spermatozoa sighted
With his powerful new microscope Leeuwenhoek observes spermatozoa in the semen of a dog
1686
Ray classifies plants
English naturalist John Ray begins publication of his Historia Plantarum, classifying some 18,600 plants in 'mutual fertility' species
1735
Linnaeus provides a system
Swedish naturalist Carolus Linnaeus publishes a 'system of nature', capable of classifying all living things
1769
Banks and Solander seek specimens
Captain Cook's distinguished passengers, Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander, collect valuable specimens of Pacific flora
1809
Lamarck on evolution
French biologist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck argues in Zoological Philosophy that creatures can inherit acquired characteristics
1811
Mary Anning discovers giant fossil
A 12-year-old Dorset child, Mary Anning, discovers at Lyme Regis a 21 ft (6.4m) fossil of an icthyosaur
1812
Cuvier launches science of palaeontology
French scientist Georges Cuvier introduces scientific palaeontology with his Research on the Fossil Bones of Quadrupeds
1831
Voyage of the Beagle
HMS Beagle sails from Plymouth to survey the coasts of the southern hemisphere, with Charles Darwin as the expedition's naturalist
1835
Protoplasm revealed
French zoologist Félix Dujardin identifies protoplasm, the viscous translucent substance common to all forms of life
1836
Darwin brings home specimens
HMS Beagle reaches Falmouth, in Cornwall, after a voyage of five years, and Charles Darwin brings with him a valuable collection of specimens
1843
Fossil fish classified
Swiss naturalist Louis Agassiz completes his pioneering Poissons Fossiles ('Fossil Fish'), classifying more than 1500 categories
1851
Clergyman discovers bee space
An American clergyman, L.L. Langstroth, discovers the 'bee space', which becomes a standard feature of the modern beehive
1854
Mendel studies peas
Austrian monk Gregor Mendel begins his study of pea plants in the garden of the Abbey of St Thomas in Brno
1854
John Snow links cholera and water
English physician John Snow proves that cholera is spread by infected water (from a pump in London's Broad Street)
1856
Neanderthal man found in quarry
The first Neanderthal man to be discovered is unearthed by quarry workers in the Neander valley, near Düsseldorf
1857
Pasteur discovers micro-organisms
French chemist Louis Pasteur proves the existence of micro-organisms by showing that a liquid will only ferment if exposed to contamination from the air
1858
Darwin receives shock in morning post
Charles Darwin is alarmed to receive in his morning post a paper by Alfred Russell Wallace, outlining very much his own theory of evolution
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Darwin
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_the_Tendency_of_Species_to_form_Varieties;_and_on_the_Perpetuation_of_Varieties_and_Species_by_Natural_Means_of_Selection
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution
/burundi/771?heading=cushite-dynasty
1859
On the Origin of Species
Charles Darwin puts forward the theory of evolution in On the Origin of Species, the result of twenty years' research
1865
Mendel launches science of genetics
Gregor Mendel reads a paper to the Natural History Society in Brno describing his discoveries in the field of genetics
1883
Galton pioneers eugenics
English polymath Francis Galton publishes Inquiries in Human Faculty, developing the theme of eugenics and coining the term
1903
Pavlov and the conditioned reflex
In a paper to a congress in Madrid, on the 'psychology and psychopathology of animals', Ivan Pavlov announces his discovery of the conditioned reflex
1905
Micro-organism causing syphilis is identified
German biologists Fritz Schaudinn and Erich Hoffmann discover the micro-organism Treponema pallidum which causes syphilis
1905
The word 'hormone' is coined
English physiologists William Bayliss and Ernest Starling coin the word 'hormone' for glandular secretions into the bloodstream
1906
The term 'genetics' is coined
English biologist William Bateson uses the word 'genetics' to describe the phenomenon of heredity and variation
1909
Human blood groups identified
Karl Landsteiner classifies the main human blood groups as A, B, AB and O
1910
Fruit fly reveals genetic secrets
US geneticist Thomas Hunt Morgan establishes the chromosome theory of heredity through his study of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster
1914
Last passenger pigeon
Martha, 29 years old and the last passenger pigeon in the world, dies in the Cincinnati zoo in Ohio
1922
Banting and Best discover insulin
Canadian physiologists Frederick Banting and Charles Best isolate insulin from the pancreas for the treatment of diabetes
1925
Scopes Monkey Trial
Biology teacher John Scopes is prosecuted for breaking state law by teaching evolution to his class of children in Dayton, Tennessee
1927
Discovery of the bee dance
Austrian zoologist Karl von Frisch demonstrates that bees communicate the whereabouts of food by means of a dance
1928
Fleming discovers penicillin
Scottish bacteriologist Alexander Fleming accidentally discovers a mould that selectively kills bacteria, and calls it penicillin
1935
Konrad Lorenz and his geese
The Austrian zoologist Konrad Lorenz describes his experiments on young geese, with their capacity to imprint on human beings
1937
Krebs cycle
German-born British scientist Hans Krebs discovers the biochemical cycle that becomes known by his name
1946
Mechanism of genetic transfer discovered
Joshua Lederberg and Edward Tatum announce their discovery of bacterial conjugation, meaning that in effect bacteria mate and transfer genes
1948
Rats in the Skinner box
US psychologist B.F. Skinner trains laboratory rats to use their brains in his 'Skinnner box'
1949
Inbuilt compass of bees
Karl von Frisch demonstrates that bees make use of the polarized light of the sun to calculate direction
1953
DNA unravelled
Molecular biologists Francis Crick and James Watson announce their discovery of the double-helix structure of DNA
1963
Silent Spring
US environmentist Rachel Carson publishes Silent Spring, an impassioned warning of ecological disaster
1983
HIV virus described
Luc Montagnier, at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, discovers a new human retrovirus that he names LAV (later changed to HIV)
1984
Genetic fingerprinting
Genetic (or DNA) fingerprinting is invented and developed by British geneticist Alec Jeffreys
1985
Human Genome Project
The Human Genome Project begins in the US Department of Energy, with the aim of sequencing the whole of human DNA
1986
Mad Cow Disease
Mad Cow Disease (BSE, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy ) is identified and described in Britain
1990
Goodall reveals dark side of primate life
British primatologist Jane Goodall publishes Through a Window, exposing violence and brutality in chimpanzees
1996
CJD variant of BSE
A fatal variant CJD (Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease) is first identified in Britain, linked to BSE but capable of infecting humans
1996
Dolly cloned
Dolly the Sheep is cloned in an epoch-making experiment at the Roslin Institute in Edinburgh
1999
Human genome sequenced
Chromosome 22 becomes the first human genome to be fully sequenced, at the Sanger Institute in Cambridge, England
2000
Human genome draft completed
A White House ceremony celebrates a full draft of the human genome completed by two rival projects
2001
Nobel prize for cell cycle discoveries
Leland Hartwel, Paul Nurse and Tim Hunt win the Nobel Prize for their discoveries of key regulators of the cell cycle
2015 October 23
Strongest hurricane ever in the Western Hemisphere
Hurricane Patricia becomes the most intense hurricane ever recorded in the Western Hemisphere with winds of 215 mph
2017 November 2
New species of ape discovered
A new species of orangutan is identified in Indonesia, becoming the third known species of orangutan as well as the first great ape to be described for almost a century
2018 March 19
Last white rhinoceros dies
The world's last male northern white rhinoceros dies in Kenya, making the subspecies functionally extinct
2019 April 28
Deepest human undersea dive in history
Victor Vescovo achieves the deepest dive of any human in history as he reaches Challenger Deep within the Mariana Trench, at a depth of 10,928 m (35,853 ft)