On this day: Liquid ocean under ice discovered on Europa

Events, birthdays and anniversaries on 2 March.
Data sent from the Galileo spacecraft in 1988 indicated that Jupiters moon Europa had a liquid ocean under ice. Picture: GettyData sent from the Galileo spacecraft in 1988 indicated that Jupiters moon Europa had a liquid ocean under ice. Picture: Getty
Data sent from the Galileo spacecraft in 1988 indicated that Jupiters moon Europa had a liquid ocean under ice. Picture: Getty

1498: Explorer Vasco da Gama’s fleet landed at Mozambique.

1629: Charles I dissolved parliament and imprisoned nine MPs.

1717: Britain’s first ballet, The Loves of Mars and Venus, created by John Weaver, had its premier at the Drury Lane Theatre, London.

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1791: The optical telegraph (semaphore machine) was unveiled in Paris.

1807: US Congress banned the slave trade, with effect from 1 January 1808.

1808: The inaugural meeting of the Wernerian Natural History Society, a former Scottish learned society, was held in Edinburgh.

1855: Aleksandr Romanov became tsar of Russia.

1867: The Jesse James gang robbed a bank in Savannah, Missouri, killing one person in the process.

1882: Robert MacLean tried unsuccessfully to assassinate Queen Victoria at Windsor.

1933: The movie King Kong, starring Fay Wray, premiered in New York.

1939: Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli was elected Pope and took the name Pius XII.

1949: The first round-the-world non-stop flight was completed by Captain James Gallagher and his 13-man USAF crew. It took 94 hours, during which the plane, Lucky Lady II, was refuelled four times in flight.

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1949: The first automatic street light was installed in Connecticut, United States.

1958: A British team led by Vivian Fuchs completed the first crossing of the Antarctic, covering 2,158 miles from the Weddell Sea to the Ross Sea in 99 days.

1969: The French-built supersonic airliner Concorde made its maiden flight from Toulouse.

1970: Southern Rhodesia broke away from Britain and became a republic under Ian Smith.

1978: Czech Vladimir Remek became the first non-Russian or non-American to go into space, when he is launched aboard Soyuz 28.

1986: The Queen signed the Australia Bill in Canberra, formally severing any Australian constitutional ties with Britain.

1988 A new political party was born when Liberals merged with the Social Democrats to form the Social and Liberal Democrats.

1990: Nelson Mandela was elected deputy president of the African National Congress.

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1994: Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean retired from competitive skating after their disappointment in winning only the bronze medal at the Lillehammer Olympics in Norway.

1995: Financial dealer Nick Leeson, whose multi-million pound dealings on the high-risk derivatives market in Singapore bankrupted Barings Bank, was arrested at Frankfurt airport after a week-long manhunt.

1998: Data sent from the Galileo spacecraft indicated that Jupiter’s moon Europa had a liquid ocean under a thick crust of ice.

2002: As part of the US invasion of Afghanistan, codenamed Operation Anaconda began.

2004: Al-Qaeda carried out the Ashura Massacre in Iraq, which left 170 dead.

2006: Sir Menzies Campbell was elected leader of the Liberal Democrats.

Births: 1316 King Robert II, first of the House of Stewart; 1900 Kurth Weill, German composer; 1917 Desi Arnaz, Cuban-born television producer; 1917 John Gardner CBE, British composer; 1919 Jennifer Jones, American actress; 1923 Cardinal Basil Hume, Archbishop of Westminster; 1942 Lou Reed, rock musician.

Deaths: 1606 Saint Nicholas Owen, English martyr; 1791 John Wesley, founder of Methodism; 1930 DH Lawrence, novelist; 1939 Howard Carter, Egyptologist; 2015 Dave Mackay, Scottish footballer.

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