I am pretty sure it's because hikers and such would not get injured in a hiking expedition. otherwise, i am clueless!
There was a keen interest in a good method of classifying plants in the 1700s to bring order and organization to the vast number of plant species being discovered during the Age of Exploration. The development of a systematic classification system would help scientists better understand and communicate information about plants, facilitating research and botanical studies.
Some natural disasters that occurred in the 1700s include the Great Hurricane of 1780, which devastated the Caribbean, the Lisbon earthquake of 1755, and the eruption of Mount Tambora in 1815, leading to the "Year Without a Summer" in 1816.
The enlightenment was the movement which stressed science and reason.
In the 1700s, environmental science began to take shape as thinkers like Carl Linnaeus developed the system of taxonomy, classifying and naming species, which laid the groundwork for ecology. This period also saw the early recognition of human impacts on nature, as industrialization began to emerge, leading to deforestation and pollution. The Enlightenment fostered a growing interest in observing and understanding natural systems, setting the stage for future environmental studies. However, formal scientific inquiry into environmental issues would not fully develop until the 19th century.
The modern method of making steel from Iron ore was originally invented in England in the 1700s by a man named Bessemer, who invented the Bessemer Converter. American interest in steel came a lot later when they needed steel for railroad tracks and steam locomotives. The largest producer was, and still is, US Steel.
there was so much material coming on plants
Because many people did no know how to sort in the 1700s which got many people thinking more about classification in the future
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There was a keen interest in a good method of classifying plants in the 1700s to bring order and organization to the vast number of plant species being discovered during the Age of Exploration. The development of a systematic classification system would help scientists better understand and communicate information about plants, facilitating research and botanical studies.
there was so much material coming on plants
by chewing an a twig or any other plants that you can chew with.
Horse pulled caridges were the method of transportation in the New England colonies in 1700's.
The power sources changed from water power to steam and in the late 1800's to oil.
1700s
The method by which scientist name all living things was invented in the mid 1700s by a Swedish man name Carolus Linnaeus.
Jean Senebier proved that plants use CO2 in their growth process in the late 1700s. Francois Huber assisted Senebier with this research.
what happened in the 1700s