The Greek scientist who concluded that the Earth was round was Pythagoras, around the 6th century BC. His observations of the shape of the Earth influenced later scholars like Aristotle and Eratosthenes.
The Greek scientist who concluded that Earth was round was Pythagoras, around the 6th century BC. He based his conclusion on observations of the stars and their positions in the sky.
The Greek scientist who is credited with demonstrating that the Earth is round was Pythagoras. He believed that the Earth was a sphere based on observations of the shapes of celestial bodies like the moon during lunar eclipses.
The ancient Greek philosopher Pythagoras is often credited with being one of the first to propose that the Earth is a sphere, around the 6th century BC. Later, Greek philosophers like Aristotle and Eratosthenes further supported the idea with observational evidence.
It is not possible to determine the first scientist on earth as the concept of science has been around since ancient times and many early civilizations made significant contributions to scientific knowledge. Some ancient Greek philosophers, like Thales and Pythagoras, are often considered among the earliest scientists.
Greek mathematician and astronomer, Eratosthenes, is credited with determining that the Earth is spherical. In the 3rd century BCE, he calculated the Earth's circumference using the angle of the sun's rays at two different locations.
The Greek scientist who concluded that Earth was round was Pythagoras, around the 6th century BC. He based his conclusion on observations of the stars and their positions in the sky.
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He first suggested that the Earth (and the other planets that were then known) rotated around the Sun instead of the other way around.
The Greek scientist who is credited with demonstrating that the Earth is round was Pythagoras. He believed that the Earth was a sphere based on observations of the shapes of celestial bodies like the moon during lunar eclipses.
The Geocentric Theory was developed by Greek astronomers. The theory was that celestial bodies moved around Earth in circular paths.
Thales of Miletus
I'm not sure exactly what you're asking here. Perhaps you are referring to Eratosthenes of Cyrene, the greek scientist who estimated the circumference of the earth by measuring the shadows of sticks in around 240 BC?
Aristotle and Ptolemy - pick one.
Newton concluded that the combination of the gravitational force between the Earth and the Sun, and the Earth's inertia moving it in a straight line, keep the Earth in orbit around the Sun.
No one lifted the earth, but Archimedes (a great scientist and mathematician) claimed that he could do it.
Your mom. It was your mom who concluded it.
Aristarchus of Samos was the Greek scientist who first proposed a heliocentric view of the universe, suggesting that the Earth revolves around the Sun. This idea was revolutionary for its time and laid the foundation for later heliocentric models developed by Copernicus and Galileo.