List of Scottish scientists
- This article is part of the List of Scots series
List of Scottish engineers and scientists is a list of notable Scottish scientists born in Scotland or associated with Scotland.
Scientist | Lifespan | Primary field | Note | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas Addison | 1881–1949 | physician | nephrology pioneer | |
James Edward Tierney Aitchison | 1836–1898 | botanist | surgeon; collected plants in India and Afghanistan | |
John Aitken | 183–1919 | meteorologist, physicist and marine engineer | inventor of the koniscope, (also known as the Aitken dust counter) | |
William Aiton | 1731–1793 | botanist | ||
Adam Anderson | 1783–1846 | physicist | contributor to Edinburgh Encyclopædia and Encyclopædia Britannica | |
Alexander Anderson | 158?–162? | mathematician | c. 1582– c. 1620 | |
John Anderson | 1833–1900 | zoologist and anatomist | curator of the Indian Museum | |
Thomas Anderson | 1832–1870 | botanist | director of the Calcutta Botanic Garden | |
William Arthur | 1894–1979 | mathematician | ||
John Logie Baird | 1888–1946 | engineer | television inventor | |
William Baird | 1803–1872 | zoologist | author of The Natural History of the British Entomostraca | |
Ken Bairden | 1943–2007 | parasitologist, epidemiologist, veterinarian | ||
Thomas Barker | 1838–1907 | mathematician | professor of pure mathematics at Owens College | |
Sir Isaac Bayley Balfour | 1853–1922 | botanist | Sherardian Professor of Botany | |
John Hutton Balfour | 1808–1884 | botanist | ||
John Barclay | 1758–1826 | anatomist | donor of the Barclay Collection at Surgeons' Hall, Edinburgh | |
James Bassantin | fl 16th century | astronomer and mathematician | author of Astronomique Discours, Lyons, 1557 | |
Alexander Graham Bell | 1847–1922 | engineer, scientist | telephone inventor | |
Eric Temple Bell | 1883–1960 | mathematician | science fiction writer | |
Robert J. T. Bell | 1876–1963 | mathematician | Professor of Pure and Applied Mathematics at the University of Otago | |
James W. Black | 1924–2010 | physician | Nobel Prize for Medicine, 1988 | |
Joseph Black | 1728–1799 | scientist | carbon dioxide discoverer | |
Robert Blair | 1748–1828 | astronomer | inventor of the aplanatic lens | |
John Boyd Orr, 1st Baron Boyd-Orr | 1880–1971 | nutritionist | Nobel Peace Prize winner | |
David Brewster | 1781–1868 | scientist | Royal Scottish Society of Arts founder | |
Thomas Brisbane | 1773–1860 | astronomer | ||
Robert Brown | 1773–1858 | botanist | Brownian Motion discoverer | |
David Bruce | 1855–1931 | pathologist, microbiologist | ||
Alexander Buchan | 1829–1907 | meteorologist, oceanographer and botanist | established the weather map as the basis of weather forecasting | |
Elaine Bullard | 1915–2011 | self-taught botanist | Official Recorder of Orkney for the Botanical Society of the British Isles for 46 years | |
Phillip Clancey | 1917–2001 | ornithologist | ornithology pioneer | |
John Craig | 1663–1731 | mathematician | Newton colleague | |
James Croll | 1821–1890 | scientist | astronomical theory of 19th-century climate change, leading proponent | |
Alexander Crum Brown | 1838–1922 | chemist | organic chemistry | |
William Cullen | 1710–1790 | physician, chemist | ||
David Cuthbertson | 1900–1989 | physician, biochemist, medical researcher, nutritionist | leading authority on metabolism | |
James Dewar | 1842–1923 | physicist | low temperature, vacuum flask inventor | |
George Dickie | 1812–1882 | botanist | specialist in algae | |
Alexander Dickson | 1836–1887 | botanist | morphological botanist | |
David Drysdale | 1877–1946 | mathematician | ||
James Alfred Ewing | 1855–1935 | physicist, engineer | discoverer of hysteresis | |
William Fairbairn | 1789–1874 | engineer | structural | |
Hugh Falconer | 1808–1865 | paleontologist | ||
James Ferguson | 1710–1776 | astronomer, instrument maker | ||
Alexander Fleming | 1881–1955 | microbiologist | Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1945 | |
Williamina Fleming | 1857–1911 | astronomer | cataloguing of stars contributor, discoverer of the Horsehead Nebula | |
John Flett | 1869–1947 | geologist | Director of the Geological Survey of Great Britain | |
James David Forbes | 1809–1868 | physicist, geologist | ||
Professor George Forbes | 1849–1936 | scientist | electrical engineering, hydro-electric power generation | |
Robert Fortune | 1813–1880 | botanist | ||
John Fraser | 1750-1811 | botanist, plant collector | ||
Patrick Geddes | 1854–1932 | biologist | urban theorist | |
Alexander Gibson | 1800–1867 | botanist | worked on forest conservation in India | |
Sir David Gill | 1843–1914 | astronomer | astrophotography pioneer | |
John Goodsir | 1814-1867 | anatomist | pioneer in the study of the cell | |
Isabella Gordon | 1901–1978 | zoologist | carcinologist | |
Robert Graham | 1786–1845 | botanist | Regius Keeper of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh | |
Thomas Graham | 1805–1869 | chemist | discovered dialysis | |
Robert Edmond Grant | 1793–1874 | biologist | Swiney lecturer in geology to the British Museum | |
Marion Cameron Gray | 1902–1979 | mathematician | discovered Gray graph | |
David Gregory | 1659–1708 | astronomer, mathematician | Savilian Professor of Astronomy | |
Duncan Farquharson Gregory | 1813–1844 | mathematician | also worked in chemistry and physics | |
James Gregory | 1638–1675 | astronomer, mathematician | Gregorian reflecting telescope, first described, Robert Hooke later built | |
James Gregory | 1832–1899 | mineralogist | believed claims of diamond discoveries in South Africa were false | |
William Gregory | 1803–1858 | mineralogist | ||
James Hall | 1761–1832 | geologist | ||
M R Henderson | 1899–1982 | botanist | ||
Thomas Henderson | 1798–1844 | astronomer | Alpha Centauri, first measured distance | |
John Hope | 1725–1786 | botanist | botanist who had genus Hopea named after him | |
Thomas Charles Hope | 1766–1844 | chemist and physician | discoverer of strontium | |
James Hutton | 1726–1797 | geologist | scientific basis of geology established | |
Robert T. A. Innes | 1861–1933 | astronomer | Proxima Centauri discoverer | |
James Ivory | 1765–1842 | mathematician | ||
William Jardine | 1800–1874 | naturalist | ||
George Johnston | 1800–1874 | naturalist | also physician and mayor of Berwick | |
Henry Halcro Johnston | 1856–1939 | botanist | also army surgeon and rugby union international | |
John Keill | 1671–1721 | mathematician and astronomer | disciple and defender of Isaac Newton, Savilian Professor of Astronomy | |
Norman Boyd Kinnear | 1882–1957 | zoologist | ||
Cargill Gilston Knott | 1856–1922 | physicist and mathematician | pioneer in seismology | |
Johann von Lamont | 1805–1879 | astronomer | Uranus and Saturn moon orbits calculated | |
Arthur Pillans Laurie | 1861–1949 | chemist | pioneered scientific analysis of paint | |
Malcolm Laurie | 1866–1932 | zoologist | specialist in arachnids, especially scorpions | |
John Leslie | 1766–1832 | mathematician, physicist | heat research | |
Joseph Lister, 1st Baron Lister, OM, FRS | 1827–1912 | surgeon | antiseptic surgery introduced, eponymous Listerine | |
William Lochead | c.1753–1815 | botanist | surgeon, curator of the St Vincent Botanical Garden | |
Sir Charles Lyell, 1st Baronet, Kt FRS | 1797–1875 | geologist, lawyer | geology pioneer, (British), foremost of his day | |
John Macadam | 1827–1865 | botanist | (Scottish-born Australian) | |
William McNab | 1844–1889 | botanist | physician | |
William MacGillivray | 1796–1852 | naturalist | ||
Sheila Scott Macintyre | 1910–1960 | mathematician | ||
Colin Maclaurin | 1698–1746 | mathematician | Maclaurin series developer | |
Anna MacGillivray Macleod | 1917–2004 | botanist, biochemist, | professor of brewing | |
John James Rickard Macleod | 1876–1935 | biochemist, physiologist | Nobel Prize laureate, 1923 | |
John George Macleod | 1915–2006 | physician | author of medical books | |
William Maclure | 1760–1843 | geologist | ||
Alan MacMasters | 1865–1927 | scientist, inventor, industrialist | inventor of the toaster | |
Sheina Marshall FRSE, FRS, OBE | 1896-1977 | marine biologist | ||
Francis Masson | 1741–180? | botanist | 1741– c. 1805 | |
James Clerk Maxwell | 1831–1879 | scientist | thermodynamics, electromagnetics theorist | |
Anderson Gray McKendrick | 1876–1943 | physician, epidemiologist | pioneer of the use of mathematical methods in epidemiology | |
John Gray McKendrick | 1841–1926 | physiologist | ||
Archibald Menzies | 1754–1852 | botanist, explorer | ||
Philip Miller | 1691–1771 | botanist | ||
Roderick Murchison | 1792–1871 | geologist | Silurian period first described, investigated | |
Alexander Murray | 1810–1884 | geologist | ||
James Napier | 1810–1884 | chemist | antiquarian | |
John Napier | 1550–1617 | mathematician | logarithms | |
William Robert Ogilvie-Grant | 1863–1924 | ornithologist | ||
James Bell Pettigrew | 1834–1908 | naturalist | Croonian Lecturer; authority on animal locomotion | |
Sir William Ramsay | 1852–1916 | chemist | Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 1904 | |
William John Macquorn Rankine | 1820–1872 | engineer, physicist | Rankine thermodynamic scale (absolute temperature), proposer | |
John Richardson | 1787–1865 | naturalist | ||
William Roxburgh | 1759–1815 | botanist | ||
John Scott Russell | 1808–1882 | civil engineer, naval architect | solitons | |
Daniel Rutherford | 1749–1819 | chemist | nitrogen element discoverer | |
John Scouler | 1804–1871 | naturalist | Enicurus scouleri is named after Scouler | |
Sir James Young Simpson | 1811–1870 | physician | anaesthetic chloroform discoverer, midwifery pioneer | |
Andrew Smith | 1797–1872 | zoologist | ||
Charles Piazzi Smyth | 1819–1900 | astronomer | Astronomer Royal for Scotland | |
Robert Angus Smith | 1817–1884 | chemist | environmental chemistry, acid rain, discoverer | |
Mary Somerville | 1780–1872 | mathematician, astronomer | ||
Matthew Stewart | 1717–1785 | mathematician | ||
James Stirling | 1692–1770 | mathematician | ||
John Struthers | 1823–1899 | anatomist | ||
Peter Guthrie Tait | 1831–1901 | mathematical physicist | proposer of the Tait conjectures in Knot theory | |
Thomas Telford | 1757–1834 | engineer, architect | civil engineer, canal builder | |
D'Arcy Wentworth Thompson | 1860–1948 | biologist and mathematician | author of On Growth and Form | |
Charles Wyville Thomson | 1830–1882 | marine zoologist | chief scientist on the Challenger expedition | |
Thomas Thomson | 1817–1878 | botanist | Superintendent of the Honourable East India Company's Botanic Garden at Calcutta | |
William Thomson, Lord Kelvin | 1824–1907 | mathematician, physicist, engineer | ||
James Wallace | 1684–1724 | botanist | participated in the Darien Scheme, and obtained plants from that area | |
James Watt | 1736–1819 | mathematician, engineer | steam engine improvements contributed key stage in the Industrial Revolution | |
Robert Watson-Watt | 1892–1973 | scientist | radar inventor | |
Joseph Wedderburn | 1882–1948 | mathematician | ||
Thomas Webster | 1773–1844 | geologist | geologist who had websterite, now normally called aluminite, named after him | |
Alexander Wilson | 1714–1786 | astronomer and meteorologist | also surgeon, type-founder, and mathematician; the first scientist to record the use of kites in meteorological investigations | |
Alexander Wilson | 1766–1813 | ornithologist | ornithology pioneer pre-Audubon (American) | |
Charles Wilson | 1869–1959 | physicist | cloud chamber inventor | |
Patrick Wilson | 1743–1811 | astronomer | type-founder, mathematician and meteorologist | |
Thomas Wright | 1809–1884 | geologist | also physician | |
William Wright | 1735–1819 | botanist | botanist who had genera Wrightia and Wrightea named after him | |
James 'Paraffin' Young | 1811–1883 | chemist | ||
Dr William Alexander Young | 1889–1928 | physician, yellow fever researcher | posthumously awarded the Médaille des Epidémies du ministère de la France d'outre-mer, 1929 |
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