Meteorology
- Year(s) Officially Discovered: 350 B.C.
- Discovery Put Into Action: Not For Hundreds Of Years
- Team/Person Behind The Discovery: Aristotle
Meteorology is the study of the weather as well as weather patterns. Funny enough, it was actually the great philosopher Aristotle that is the inventor of not only the term but also pioneered the first studies within meteorology. The term is Greek for “the study of things high in the air.” Yet it cannot be ignored just how close it is to astrology too. You’ll likely already be aware of how important astrology was to Ancient people.
Therefore, it should not come as a shock that they had a term at the ready for the study of our weather. Aristotle wrote the first material on this in his book appropriately titled, Meteorology. He felt by studying the weather, we could better plan for severe issues it caused, rather than be taken by surprise. In the book, he discusses water evaporation, earthquakes, and other weather-related material that he knew of at the time this was said to have been written, 350 BCE. Sadly, we did not have major breakthroughs in the field until hundreds of years after Aristotle’s work was published. Today, however, we have the best weather for studying data and equipment in history!