Date Invention or Discovery Inventor or Discoverer Nationality
1250 Magnifying glass Roger Bacon English
1450 Printing press Johann Gutenberg German
1504 Pocket watch Peter Henlein German
1590 Compound microscope Zacharias Janssen Dutch
1593 Water thermometer Galileo Italian
1608 Telescope Hans Lippershey Dutch
1625 Blood transfusion Jean-Baptiste Denys French
1629 Steam turbine Giovanni Branca Italian
1642 Adding machine Blaise Pascal French
1643 Barometer Evangelista Torricelli Italian
1650 Air pump Otto von Guericke German
1656 Pendulum clock Christiaan Huygens Dutch
1661 Methanol. - Volume, pressure, temperature relation in gases. Robert Boyle Irish
1668 Reflecting telescope Isaac Newton English
1671 Calculating machine Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz German
1683 Bacteria Anton van Leeuwenhoek Dutch
1687 Motion, Laws of Isaac Newton English
1698 Steam pump Thomas Savery English
1701 Seed drill Jethro Tull English
1710 Piano Bartolomeo Cristofori Italian
1712 Steam engine Thomas Newcomen British
1714 Mercury thermometer Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit German
1717 Diving bell Edmund Halley English
1725 Stereotyping William Ged Scottish
1745 Leyden jar (condenser) E.G. von Kleist German
1752 Lightning rod Benjamin Franklin American
1758 Achromatic lens John Dollond British
1759 Marine chronometer John Harrison British
1764 Spinning jenny James Hargreaves British
1769 Spinning frame R. Arkwright English
1769 Steam engine (with separate condenser) James Watt British
1775 Submarine David Bushnell American
1780 Steel pen Samuel Harrison English
1780 Bifocal lens Benjamin Franklin American
1783 Balloon, hot-air Joseph Michel Montgolfier and
Jacques Étienne Montgolfier French
1784 Threshing machine Andrew Meikle British
1785 Power loom Edmund Cartwright British
1786 Steamboat John Fitch American
1788 Flyball governor James Watt British
1791 Gas turbine John Barber British
1792 Illuminating gas William Murdock Scottish
1793 Cotton gin Eli Whitney American
1795 Hydraulic press Joseph Bramah English
1796 Lithography Aloys Senefelder German
1796 Smallpox vaccination Edward Jenner British
1799 Fourdrinier machine (papermaking) Louis Robert French
1800 Jacquard loom Joseph Marie Jacquard French
1800 Electric battery Count Alessandro Volta Italian
1801 Pattern loom Joseph Marie Jacquard French
1804 Screw propeller John Stevens American
1804 Solid-fuel rocket William Congreve British
1804 Steam locomotive Richard Trevithick British
1805 Electroplating Luigi Gasparo Brugnatelli Italian
1810 Food preservation (by sterilization & air-exclusion) François Appert French
1810 Printing press Frederick Koenig German
1814 Railroad locomotive George Stephenson British
1815 Safety lamp Sir Humphry Davy British
1816 Bicycle (no pedals) Karl D. Sauerbronn German
1819 Stethoscope René Théophile-Hyacinthe Laënnec French
1820 Hygrometer J.F. Daniell English
1820 Galvanometer Johann Salomo Cristoph Schweigger German
1821 Electric motor Michael Faraday British
1823 Silicon Jöns Jakob Berzelius Swedish
1823 Electromagnet William Sturgeon British
1824 Portland cement Joseph Aspdin British
1827 Friction match John Walker British
1829 Typewriter W.A. Burt American
1829 Braille printing Louis Braille French
1830 Platform scales Thaddeus Fairbanks American
1830 Sewing machine Barthélemy Thimonnier French
1831 Phosphorus match Charles Sauria French
1831 Reaper Cyrus Hall McCormick American
1831 Dynamo Michael Faraday British
1834 Electric streetcar Thomas Davenport American
1835 Pistol (revolver) Samuel Colt American
1837 Telegraph Samuel Finley Breese Morse
Sir Charles Wheatstone American
British
1838 Morse code Samuel Finley Breese Morse American
1839 Photography Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre
Joseph Nicéphore Niepce
and William Henry Fox Talbot French
British
1839 Vulcanized rubber Charles Goodyear American
1839 Steam hammer James Nasmyth Scottish
1839 Bicycle (with pedals) Kirkpatrick MacMillan British
1845 Pneumatic tire Robert William Thompson American
1846 Rotary printing press Richard March Hoe American
1846 Nitroglycerin Ascanio Sobrero Italian
1846 Guncotton Christian Friedrich Schönbein German
1846 Ether Crawford Williamson Long American
1849 Reinforced concrete F.J. Monier French
1849 Safety pin Walter Hunt American
1849 Water turbine James Bicheno Francis American
1850 Refrigerator Alexander Twining
& James Harrison American
& Australian
1850 Mercerized cotton John Mercer British
1851 Breech-loading rifle Edward Maynard American
1851 Opthalmoscope Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz German
1852 Nonrigid airship Henri Giffard French
1852 Elevator (with brake) Elisha Graves Otis American
1852 Gyroscope Jean Bernard Léon Foucault French
1855 Hypodermic syringe Alexander Wood Scottish
1855 Safety matches J.E. Lundstrom Swedish
1856 Bessemer converter (steel) Sir Henry Bessemer British
1858 Harvester Charles and William Marsh American
1859 Spectroscope Gustav Robert Kirchhoff and
Robert Wilhelm Bunsen German
1860 Internal-combustion engine
(gas, two-cycle) Sadi Carnot (theory, 1824)
Jean-Joseph-Étienne Lenoir French
1861 Web-fed newspaper printing press Richard March Hoe American
1861 Electric furnace Wilhelm Siemens British
1861 Machine gun Richard Jordan Gatling American
1861 Kinematoscope Coleman Sellers American
1865 Heredity, Laws of Gregor Mendel Austrian
1865 Antiseptic surgery Joseph Lister English
1866 Paper (from wood pulp, sulfite process) Benjamin Chew Tilghman American
1866 Dynamite Alfred Bernhard Nobel Swedish
1868 Dry cell Georges Leclanché French
1868 Typewriter Carlos Glidden and
Christopher Latham Sholes American
1868 Air brake George Westinghouse American
1870 Celluloid John Wesley Hyatt and Isaiah Hyatt American
1871 Continuous current dynamo Zénobe-Théophile Gramme Belgian
1874 Quadruplex telegraph Thomas Alva Edison American
1875 Atomated Machine-oiler Elijah McCoy, the "Real McCoy" Canadian
1876 Germ theory of disease Louis Pasteur (1859)
and Robert Koch French
German
1876 Telephone Alexander Graham Bell American
1877 Internal-combustion engine (four-cycle) Nikolaus August Otto German
1877 Talking machine (phonograph) Thomas Alva Edison American
1877 Microphone Emile Berliner American
1877 Electric welding Elihu Thomson American
1877 Refrigerator car G.F. Swift American
1878 Cream separator Carl Gustav de Laval Swedish
1878 Cathode ray tube Sir William Crookes British
1879 Cash register James J. Ritty American
1879 Light Bulb
(Incandescent filament) Thomas Alva Edison
Sir Joseph Wilson Swan American
British
1879 Automobile engine (two-cycle) Karl Benz German
1879 Arc lamp Charles Francis Bush American
1880 Linotype Ottmar Mergenthaler American
1884 Steam turbine C.A. Parsons English
1884 Rayon (nitrocellulose) Comte Hilaire Bernigaud de Chardonnet French
1884 Multiple-wheel steam turbine Sir Charles Algernon Parsons British
1884 Nipkow disk (mechanical television scanning device) Paul Gottlieb Nipkow German
1884 Fountain pen Lewis Edson Waterman American
1885 Automobile
(w/ int.combustion engine) Karl Benz and
Gottlieb Daimler German
1885 Graphophone (dictating machine) Chichester A. Bell and
Charles Sumner Tainter American
1885 AC transformer William Stanley American
1887 Air-inflated rubber tire J.B. Dunlop Scottish
1887 Gramophone (disk records) Emile Berliner American
1887 Gas mantle Baron Carl Auer von Welsbach Austrian
1887 Mimeograph Albert Blake Dick American
1887 Monotype Tolbert Lanston American
1887 Automated Electric Elevator Alexander Miles American
1888 Adding machine (recording) William Seward Burroughs American
1888 Kodak camera George Eastman American
1889 Steam turbine C.G. de Laval Swedish
1890 Rayon (cuprammonium) Louis Henri Despeissis French
1891 Glider Otto Lilienthal German
1891 Motion picture camera (kinetograph) Thomas Alva Edison
William K. L. Dickson American
British
1891 Motion picture viewer (kinetoscope) Thomas Alva Edison
William K. L. Dickson American
British
1891 Synthetic rubber Sir William Augustus Tilden British
1892 AC motor Nikola Tesla American
1892 Three-color camera Frederick Eugene Ives American
1892 Rayon (viscose) Charles Frederick Cross British
1892 Vacuum bottle (Dewar flask) Sir James Dewar British
1893 Photoelectric cell Julius Elster Hans F. Geitel German
1893 Diesel engine Rudolf Diesel German
1893 Gasoline automobile Charles Edgar Duryea and
J. Frank Duryea American
1894 Motion picture projection Louis Jean Lumière and Auguste Marie Lumière
Charles Francis Jenkins French
American
1895 X-ray Wilhelm Konrad Röntgen German
1895 Rayon (acetate) Charles Frederick Cross British
1895 Wireless telegraph Marchese Guglielmo Marconi Italian
1896 Experimental airplane Samuel Pierpont Langley American
1898 Sensitized photographic paper Leo Hendrik Baekeland American
1900 Rigid dirigible airship Graf Ferdinand von Zeppelin German
1902 Radiotelephone Valdemar Poulsen
Reginald Aubrey Fessenden Danish
American
1903 Airplane Wilbur Wright and Orville Wright American
1903 Windshield wipers Mary Anderson American
1903 Electrocardiograph Willem Einthoven Dutch
1905 Diode rectifier tube (radio) Sir John Ambrose Fleming British
1906 Gyrocompass Hermann Anschütz-Kämpfe German
1907 Triode amplifier tube (radio) Lee De Forest American
1908 Cellophane Jacques Edwin Brandenberger Swiss
1908 Two-color motion picture camera C. Albert Smith British
1909 Salvarsan Paul Ehrlich German
1910 Plastic synthesized (Bakelite) Leo H. Baekeland American
1910 Hydrogenation of coal Friedrich Bergius German
1910 Gyroscopic compass and stabilizer Elmer Ambrose Sperry American
1911 Air conditioning W.H. Carrier American
1911 Vitamins Casimir Funk Polish
1911 Cellophane Jacques Edwin Brandenberger Swiss
1911 Neon lamp Georges Claude French
1912 Mercury-vapor lamp Peter Cooper Hewitt American
1913 Ramjet engine René Lorin French
1913 Multigrid electron tube Irving Langmuir American
1913 Cracked gasoline William Meriam Burton American
1913 Heterodyne radio receiver Reginald Aubrey Fessenden American
1914 Gas-Mask (Hood) Garrett Morgan American
1915 Automobile self-starter Charles Franklin Kettering American
1916 Browning gun (automatic rifle) John Moses Browning American
1916 Gas-filled incandescent lamp Irving Langmuir American
1916 X-ray tube William David Coolidge American
1919 Mass spectrograph Sir Francis William Aston
Arthur Jeffrey Dempster British
American
1922-26 Sound motion pictures T.W. Case American
1922 Insulin Sir Frederick Grant Banting Canadian
1923 Autogiro Juan de la Cierva Spanish
1923 Television iconoscope Vladimir Kosma Zworykin American
1923 Three-way Traffic Signal Garrett Morgan American
1924 Quick-frozen food Clarence Birdseye American
1925 Television image dissector tube Philo Taylor Farnsworth American
1926 Aerosol can Erik Rotheim Norwegian
1926 Liquid-fuel rocket Robert Hutchings Goddard American
1927 Paints & Stains from soybeans George W. Carver American
1927-9 Universe is Expanding George LeMaitre
Edwin P. Hubble Belgian
American
1928 Penicillin Sir Alexander Fleming British
1930 Bathysphere (Charles) William Beebe American
1930 Freon (low-boiling fluorine compounds) Thomas Midgley and coworkers American
1930 Modern gas-turbine engine Sir Frank Whittle British
1930 Neoprene (synthetic rubber) Father Julius Arthur Nieuwland and Wallace Hume Carothers American
1931 Cyclotron Ernest Orlando Lawrence American
1931 Differential analyzer (analogue computer) Vannevar Bush American
1932 Phase contrast microscope Frits Zernike Dutch
1932 Van de Graaff generator Robert Jemison Van de Graaff American
1933 Frequency modulation (FM) Edwin Howard Armstrong American
1935 Buna (synthetic rubber) German scientists German
1935 Radiolocator (radar) Sir Robert Watson-Watt British
1935 Cortisone synthesized Percy Julian, Edward Kendall
Tadeus Reichstein Americans
Swiss
1935 Electron microscope German scientists German
1935 Sulfanllamide Gerhard Domagk German
1935 Nylon Wallace Hume Carothers American
1936 Jet Engine Propulsion Sir Frank Whittle
Hans von Ohain English
German
1936 Twin-rotor helicopter Heinrich Focke German
1937 Snowmobile Armand Bombardier Canadian
1938 Ballpoint pen Georg and Ladislao Biro Hungarian
1939 DDT Paul Müller Swiss
1939 Helicopter Igor Sikorsky American
1940 Betatron Donald William Kerst American
1941 Turbojet aircraft engine Sir Frank Whittle British
1942 Guided missile Wernher von Braun German
1942 Nuclear reactor Enrico Fermi American
1942 Xerography Chester Carlson American
1944 V-2 (rocket-propelled bomb) German scientists German
1945 Atomic bomb U.S. government scientists American
1945 Streptomycin Selman A. Waksman American
1946 Digital computer, electronic John Presper Eckert, Jr., and
John W. Mauchly American
1947 Holography Dennis Gabon English
1947 Chlormycetin Mildred Rebstock American
1947 Polaroid Land camera Edwin Herbert Land American
1947 Bathyscaphe Auguste Piccard Swiss
1947 Microwave oven Percy L. Spencer American
1948 Scintillation counter Hartmut Kallmann German
1948 Aureomycin Benjamin Minge Duggar and
Chandra Bose Subba Row American
1948 Transistor John Bardeen, Walter Houser Brattain, and William Shockley American
1949 Ramjet airplane René Leduc French
1950 Color television Peter Carl Goldmark American
1950 NMR (Nuclear Magnetic Resonance) Felix Bloch & Edward Purcell American
1952 Hydrogen bomb U.S. government scientists American
1952 Bubble chamber (nuclear particle detector) Donald Arthur Glaser American
1953 Maser Charles Townes American
1953 Structure of DNA described James Watson
and Francis Crick American
English
1954 Solar battery Bell Telephone Laboratory scientists American
1954 Polio vaccine Jonas Salk American
1955 Synthetic diamonds General Electric scientists American
1955 Carbon dating W.F. Libby American
1955 Optical fibers Narinder S. Kapany Indian
1956 Hovercraft Christopher Cockerell English
1956 First prototype rotary engine Felix Wankel German
1956 Videotape Charles Ginsberg, Ray Dolby American
1957 Sodium-cooled atomic reactor U.S. government scientists American
1957 Artificial earth satellite USSR government scientists Soviet
1958 Communications satellite U.S. government scientists American
1959 Integrated circuit Jack Kilby, Robert Noyce American
1960 Laser Charles Hard Townes, Arthur L. Schawlow, and Gordon Gould American
1960 Chlorophyll synthesized Robert Burns Woodward American
1960 Birth-control pill Gregory Pincus, John Rock, and
Min-chueh Chang American
1962 Light-emitting diode (LED) Nick Holonyak, Jr. American
1964 Liquid-crystal display George Heilmeier American
1965 Kevlar technology Stephanie Kwolek American
1966 Artificial heart (left ventricle) Michael Ellis DeBakey American
1966 Tunable dye laser Mary Spaeth American
1967 Human heart transplant Christiaan Neethling Barnard South Africa
1969 Internet (initially "ARPAnet") Leonard Kleinrock American
1970 First full synthesis of a gene Har Gobind Khorana American
1971 Microprocessor Ted Hoff American
1971 Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging Raymond Damadian American
1972 Electronic pocket calculator J.S. Kilby and J.D. Merryman American
1972 First magnetohydrodynamic power generator USSR government scientists Soviet
1973 Skylab orbiting space laboratory U.S. government scientists American
1974 Ethernet Robert M. Metcalfe & D.R. Boggs American
1974 Recombinant DNA (genetic engineering) U.S. scientists American
1975 CAT (computerized axial tomography) scanner Godfrey N. Hounsfield British
1975 Fiberoptics Bell Laboratories American
1976 Computer (personal) Steve Wozniak American
1976 Supercomputer J.H. Van Tassel and Seymour Cray American
tr > 1977 MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) Paul Lauterbur and Peter Mansfield American
1978 Synthesis of human insulin genes Roberto Crea, Tadaaki Hirose, Adam Kraszewski, and Keiichi Itakura American
1978 Mammal to mammal gene transplants Paul Berg, Richard Mulligan, and Bruce Howard American
1979 Compact disc Joop Sinjou
Toshi Tada Doi Dutch
Japanese
1979 Genetic flaw repaired in mouse cells by recombinant DNA and micromanipulation techniques W. French Anderson and coworkers American
1981 Space transportation system (space shuttle) National Aeronautics and Space Administration engineers American
1982 Artificial heart Robert K. Jarvik American
1983 Scanning tunneling microscope Gerd Binnig
Heinrich Rohrer German
Swiss
1986 High-temperature superconductors J. Georg Bednorz
Karl A. Müller German
Swiss
1992 Magnetic boat Yoshiro Saji Japanese
2007-03-12 01:55:16
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Most things you can think of were probably invented by the British!
Television - John Logie Baird
Telephone - Alexander Graham Bell
Fax Machine - Alexander Bain
Telegraph - William Cooke & Charles Wheatstone
Computer - Manchester University
World Wide Web - Tim Berners-Lee
Bicycle - Kirkpatrick MacMillan
Motor Cycle - Edward Butler
Motorscooter - Greville Bradshaw
Hovercraft - Sir Christopher Cockerell
Jet Engine - Sir Frank Whittle
RADAR - Sir Robert Watson-Watt
Locomotive - Richard Trevitheck
Tank - Sir Ernest Swinton
Steam engine - Thomas Savery/James Watt
Piston Engine - Thomas Newcomben
Power Loom - Edmund Cartwright
Spinning frame - Richard Arkwright
Spinning Mule - Samuel Crompton
Spinning Jenny - James Hargreaves
Waterproof rubber - Charles Mackintosh
Electric light bulb - Sir Joseph Wilson Swan
Electromagnet - William Sturgeon
Electric Motor - Michael Faraday
Lawn Mower - Edwin Beard Budding
Penicillin - Alexander Fleming
etc etc etc
2007-03-04 10:09:53
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answer #2
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answered by mainwoolly 6
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The telephone - Alexander Graham Bell
The television - Logie Baird
after the above I lose track of names, however, here are a few other Brit inventions for your to find more about.
RADAR, the hover craft, first workable jet engine [Sir Frank Whittle RAF].
Go back into the Victorian era and beyond that and there is a whole list of stuff invented by the Brits - we had the world's first ever industrial revolution; originally water powered, then steam.
In my boyhood of the 1940s and 50s, the railways were still very much steam driven. If you get a chance, I recommend you see a full sized steam locomotive in action - awesome power - weighing in at around 70 tons. There are still plenty of steam railways in UK.
2007-03-12 04:44:01
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Disc Brakes - Frederick William Lanc
Tin Can - Peter Durand
Cat Eyes - Percy Shaw
Corkscrews - H.S. Heeley
Crossword Puzzles - Arthur Wynne
Electric Motor - Michael Faraday Electromagnet - William Sturgeon
F Fax Machine - Alexander Bain
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
G Gas Mask -John Tyndall and others
I-K Internal Combustion Engine - Samuel Brown
Jet Engines - Sir Frank Whittle Kelvin Scale - Lord William Thomson Kelvin
Lawn Mower - Edwin Beard Budding
Lightbulbs - Humphry Davy, Sir Joseph Wilson Swan, James Bowman Lindsay Locomotive - Richard Trevithick
Penicillin - Alexander Fleming
Penny Farthing - James Starley
Periodic Table - John Newlands Periscope - Sir Howard Grubb
Polyester - John Rex Whinfield and James Tennant Dickson
Radar Locating of Aircraft - Sir Robert Alexander Watson-Watt
Seed Drill - Jethro Tull
Sewing Machines - Thomas Saint
Steam Engine - Thomas Savery, Thomas Newcomen, James
Submarine - William Bourne,
Spinning Jenny - James Hargreaves
Television - John Logie Baird
Thermos - Sir James Dewar Toilet Paper - British Perforated Paper Company
Torpedo - Robert Whitehead 1866
Umbrella (steel-ribbed) - Samuel Fox
Vacuum Cleaner - Hubert Cecil Booth
Viagra - Peter Dunn, Albert Wood, Dr Nicholas Terrett
Waterproof Fabric - Charles Macintosh World Wide Web - Tim Berners-Lee
2007-03-04 09:50:30
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answer #4
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answered by jazette 2
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Well, inventions don't just happen like the proverbial light bulb going off in your head. For instance, James Watt didn't invent the steam engine; he merely improved the Newcomen engine which went before it, and that was an improvement on something else again. Watt did come up with a version of a copying machine that used ink mixed with gum that would copy drawings until the gum dried out, but that was just an improvement on Gutenberg's printing press. There are just too many such examples to mention. I refer you to James Burke's assorted writings. He's a science historian, and very funny with it.
2007-03-04 09:52:48
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answer #5
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answered by JelliclePat 4
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Hey MC,
Check out the web site, but here are some samples:
A
* William George Armstrong, (1810-1900), UK — hydraulic crane
* Joseph Aspdin, (1788-1855), England — Portland cement
modern programmable computer
* Neil Arnott, (1788-1874), UK — waterbed
[edit] B
* Charles Babbage, (1791-1871), UK — Analytical engine
* John Logie Baird, (1888-1946), Uk — a working television
You have to look for UK or England on the inventions.
2007-03-04 09:49:00
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answer #6
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answered by BuyTheSeaProperty 7
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Jacques Custow did no longer make quite a few underwater discoveries til the mid Nineteen Seventies, that have been written interior the Bible, and there are greater. real, organic technology replaced into written interior the Bible in the previous guy had a clue. the place do ya think of a majority of those "magnificent" minds have been given the thoughts to puzzle out? Get a clue. right here is basically one for ya. interest 38:31. The Pleiades and Orion action picture star cluster defined. We now be responsive to that the Pleiades action picture star cluster is gravitationally sure, mutually as the Orion action picture star cluster is loose, and disintegrating because of the fact the gravity of the cluster isn't adequate to bind the gang mutually. 4,000 years in the past God asked interest, "are you able to bind the cluster of Pleiades, or loose the belt of Orion?. yet, it rather is basically in the near previous that we found out that the Pleiades is gravitationally sure, and Orion's stars are flying aside. Have a marvelous day!
2016-09-30 05:02:18
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answer #7
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answered by truesdale 4
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Television
Telephone
Jet Engine
Spinning Jenny
Light bulbs
Just as an afterthought - many of the greatest British inventors were in actual fact Scottish.
2007-03-05 05:58:17
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answer #8
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answered by monkeyface 7
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Pungi holes, (My grandfather used them more than 70 years ago)
Handles on teacups
ceramic dinner plates
Gentleman's Relish
Worcestershire Sauce
Bramley Apple Pie
Yorkshire Puddings
Left Handed Spoons
The Longbow
To name but a few
2007-03-11 11:39:31
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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James watt - steam engine
Hargreaves - spinning Jenny
John Logie Baird - television
Cockrill - hovercraft
Frank Whittle - Jet engine
2007-03-04 09:46:44
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answer #10
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answered by rosie recipe 7
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Don't forget the British discovered America
2007-03-08 12:53:15
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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