Labor omnia vincit improbus. VIRGIL, Georgica I, 144-145. In the first
part of his Theoria combinationis observationum erroribus min- imis
obnoxiae, published in 1821, Carl Friedrich Gauss [Gau80, p.10]
deduces a Chebyshev-type inequality for a probability density function,
when it only has the property that its value always decreases, or at
least does l not increase, if the absolute value of x increases . One
may therefore conjecture that Gauss is one of the first scientists to
use the property of 'single-humpedness' of a probability density
function in a meaningful probabilistic context. More than seventy years
later, zoologist W.F.R. Weldon was faced with 'double- humpedness'.
Indeed, discussing peculiarities of a population of Naples crabs, possi-
bly connected to natural selection, he writes to Karl Pearson (E.S.
Pearson [Pea78, p.328]): Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings hath
He perfected praise! In the last few evenings I have wrestled with a
double humped curve, and have overthrown it. Enclosed is the diagram...
If you scoff at this, I shall never forgive you. Not only did Pearson
not scoff at this bimodal probability density function, he examined it
and succeeded in decomposing it into two 'single-humped curves' in his
first statistical memoir (Pearson [Pea94]).