J. M. F. Biggs: Difference between revisions

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{{a|heroes|{{image|J M F Biggs|png|J M F Biggs {{vsr|1934}}}}}}[[John Biggs|J. M. F. “Jack” Biggs]], 3rd Viscount of Canning Town (1933-2007) was a British financial naturalist. Deeply influenced by Channel Islands botanist {{author|Ichabod Mourant}}, Biggs came to national prominence when he derived the “[[Biggs constant]]” from a set of equations discovered amongst Mourant’s papers when the great man died in 1958. Biggs used the equations to calculate the smallest possible size for a forensically significant jurisprudential particle.  
{{a|heroes|{{image|J M F Biggs|png|''J M F Biggs and the Conundrum of Indeterminacy'' {{vsr|1934}}}}}}[[John Biggs|J. M. F. “Jack” Biggs]], 3rd Viscount of Canning Town (1933-2007) was a British financial naturalist. Deeply influenced by Channel Islands botanist {{author|Ichabod Mourant}}, Biggs came to national prominence when he derived the “[[Biggs constant]]” from a set of equations discovered amongst Mourant’s papers when the great man died in 1958. Biggs used the equations to calculate the smallest possible size for a forensically significant jurisprudential particle.  


Later that same year, when experimenting on a “Boats” [[repackaging]] in his laboratory in Cabot Square, he used [[Biggs constant]] to generate a live example of this particle, which he called the “[[Biggs hoson]]”.   
Later that same year, when experimenting on a “Boats” [[repackaging]] in his laboratory in Cabot Square, he used [[Biggs constant]] to generate a live example of this particle, which he called the “[[Biggs hoson]]”.   

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