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'In the back garden of the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Cambridge is an apple tree. There is another in the University Botanic Gardens. Each is said to be a descendant of the one at Woolsthorpe Manor near Grantham that inspired the founder of modern physics to inquire into the nature of gravitation and the laws of motion.'
Massachusetts Institute of Tecnology
Massachusetts Institute of Tecnology
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DESCENDANTS of the apple tree that inspired Sir Isaac Newton's laws of gravity are sprouting again in Canada thanks to two Ontario men. It took 10 years and two unsuccessful attempts to get a viable graft from an offspring of Newton's tree, but Bob Prince, a dean of science...
(Article seemingly unavailable (not found 9/05/07). No picture available)
(Article seemingly unavailable (not found 9/05/07). No picture available)
(Picture entitled 'Newton's apple tree Master's Garden', belonging to the album 'Mich Term 2003' from 'PWF Personal Web Page Server - people.pwf.cam.ac.uk for students at Cambridge. This student also has a funny little blog type set up of their own with a little archive of items: http://www.neilcopland.com. On the page 'Who am I?' the second line states: 'This is what I said a few years back.' Although it is seemingly written from his present.)
York University, Canada. From Profiles; in house magazine.
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"The trees are genetically traceable to the family home of Isaac Newton and the site of the legendary falling apple," said Robert Prince, Dean of the Faculty of Pure and Applied Science.'
'THE history books say that Isaac Newton's theory of universal gravitation was inspired by a falling apple. But what happened to the tree? Clones claimed to have been grown from grafts of the great mathematician's apple tree stand in Britain and elsewhere. The time is now ripe to weed out any imposters.
Newton's tree, which grew at Woolsthorpe Manor, his Lincolnshire home, was blown down around 1820, nearly a century after his death.'
Newton's tree, which grew at Woolsthorpe Manor, his Lincolnshire home, was blown down around 1820, nearly a century after his death.'
Physics and Astonomy Department - University of Nedraska - Lincoln
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1 comment:
Comments and pictures found through web search on Newtons Tree. At the time I was thinking about the validility of the claims these individuls/groups make, and the authority with which they say it. Returning now, I have found links and coincidences I had missed before, such as surnames, and have also discovered some of the information is out of date or even removed. This exercise could go on; there are many other 'results' found under the search. The amount of text has all been cut down - I wanted it to remain a few (succinct?) sentences: pertaining to the source of the tree, and its proof of origins. Where available, I have also included the pictures which accompanied the origional words.
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