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Kazimiera
06-17-2013, 01:07 AM
The wheel

http://www.publicdomainpictures.net/pictures/20000/nahled/wooden-wheel-2961298297486uVR.jpg

Before the invention of the wheel in 3500 B.C., humans were severely limited in how much stuff we could transport over land, and how far. Wheeled carts facilitated agriculture and commerce by enabling the transportation of goods to and from markets, as well as easing the burdens of people traveling great distances. Now, wheels are vital to our way of life, found in everything from clocks to vehicles to turbines.


The nail

http://blog.lib.umn.edu/scho0535/nailguninjuriesinconstruction/images/Nails_GNU%20agreement.jpg

Without nails, civilization would surely crumble. This key invention dates back more than 2,000 years to the Ancient Roman period, and became possible only after humans developed the ability to cast and shape metal. Previously, wood structures had to be built by interlocking adjacent boards geometrically a much more arduous construction process.

Meanwhile, the screw a stronger but harder-to-insert fastener is thought to have been invented by the Greek scholar Archimedes in the third century B.C.


The compass

http://herviewfromhome.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/compass-musicians.jpeg

Ancient mariners navigated by the stars, but that method didn't work during the day or on cloudy nights, and so it was unsafe to voyage far from land.

The Chinese invented the first compass sometime between the 9th and 11th century; it was made of lodestone, a naturally-magnetized iron ore, the attractive properties of which they had been studying for centuries. (Pictured is a model of an ancient Chinese compass from the Han Dynasty; it is a south-indicating ladle, or sinan, made of polished lodestone.) Soon after, the technology passed to Europeans and Arabs through nautical contact. The compass enabled mariners to navigate safely far from land, increasing sea trade and contributing to the Age of Discovery.


The printing press

https://www.peabody.harvard.edu/files/Printing-Press_0.jpg

The German Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press around 1440. Key to its development was the hand mold, a new molding technique that enabled the rapid creation of large quantities of metal movable type. Printing presses exponentially increased the speed with which book copies could be made, and thus they led to the rapid and widespread dissemination of knowledge for the first time in history. Twenty million volumes had been printed in Western Europe by 1500.

Among other things, the printing press permitted wider access to the Bible, which in turn led to alternative interpretations, including that of Martin Luther, whose "95 Theses" a document printed by the hundred-thousand sparked the Protestant Reformation.


The internal combustion engine

http://www.substech.com/dokuwiki/lib/exe/fetch.php?w=&h=&cache=cache&media=internal_combustion_engine.png

In these engines, the combustion of a fuel releases a high-temperature gas, which, as it expands, applies a force to a piston, moving it. Thus, combustion engines convert chemical energy into mechanical work. Decades of engineering by many scientists went in to designing the internal combustion engine, which took its (essentially) modern form in the latter half of the 19th century. The engine ushered in the Industrial Age, as well as enabling the invention of a huge variety of machines, including modern cars and aircraft.

Pictured are the operating steps of a four-stroke internal combustion engine. The strokes are as follows: 1) Intake stroke - air and vaporised fuel are drawn in. 2) Compression stroke - fuel vapor and air are compressed and ignited. 3) Power stroke - fuel combusts and piston is pushed downwards, powering the machine. 4) Exhaust stroke - exhaust is driven out.


The telephone

http://www.writeupp.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/phone.jpg

Though several inventors did pioneering work on electronic voice transmission (many of whom later filed intellectual property lawsuits when telephone use exploded), Alexander Graham Bell was the first to be awarded a patent for the electric telephone in 1876. His patent drawing is pictured above.

The invention quickly took off, and revolutionalized global business and communication.


The light bulb

http://fc09.deviantart.net/images2/i/2004/06/c/4/light_bulb_stock_by_porch.jpg

When all you have is natural light, productivity is limited to daylight hours. Light bulbs changed the world by allowing us to be active at night. According to historians, two dozen people were instrumental in inventing incandescent lamps throughout the 1800s; Thomas Edison is credited as the primary inventor because he created a completely functional lighting system, including a generator and wiring as well as a carbon-filament bulb like the one above, in 1879.

As well as initiating the introduction of electricity in homes throughout the Western world, this invention also had a rather unexpected consequence of changing people's sleep patterns. Instead of going to bed at nightfall (having nothing else to do) and sleeping in segments throughout the night separated by periods of wakefulness, we now stay up except for the 7 to 8 hours allotted for sleep, and, ideally, we sleep all in one go.


Penicillin

http://blog.europeana.eu/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Penicillin.jpg

It's one of the most famous discovery stories in history. In 1928, the Scottish scientist Alexander Fleming noticed a bacteria-filled Petri dish in his laboratory with its lid accidentally ajar. The sample had become contaminated with a mold, and everywhere the mold was, the bacteria was dead. That antibiotic mold turned out to be the fungus Penicillium, and over the next two decades, chemists purified it and developed the drug Penicillin, which fights a huge number of bacterial infections in humans without harming the humans themselves.


Contraceptives

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-M4qjw0UkwLE/Tgi8luXppzI/AAAAAAAACBs/FjAZO17Su44/s1600/Birth+Control.jpg

Not only have birth control pills, condoms and other forms of contraception sparked a sexual revolution in the developed world by allowing men and women to have sex for leisure rather than procreation, they have also drastically reduced the average number of offspring per woman in countries where they are used. With fewer mouths to feed, modern families have achieved higher standards of living and can provide better for each child. Meanwhile, on the global scale, contraceptives are helping the human population gradually level off; our number will probably stabilize by the end of the century. Certain contraceptives, such as condoms, also curb the spread of sexually transmitted diseases.

Natural and herbal contraception has been used for millennia. Condoms came into use in the 18th century, while the earliest oral contraceptive "the pill" was invented in the late 1930s by a chemist named Russell Marker.

Penicillin was being mass produced and advertised by 1944. This poster attached to a curbside mailbox advised World War II servicemen to take the drug to rid themselves of venereal disease.


The Internet

http://www.oecd.org/media/oecdorg/topics/internet/48405289.jpg

It really needs no introduction: The global system of interconnected computer networks known as the Internet is used by billions of people worldwide. Countless people helped develop it, but the person most often credited with its invention is the computer scientist Lawrence Roberts. In the 1960s, a team of computer scientists working for the U.S. Defense Department's ARPA (Advanced Research Projects Agency) built a communications network to connect the computers in the agency, called ARPANET. It used a method of data transmission called "packet switching" which Roberts, a member of the team, developed based on prior work of other computer scientists. ARPANET was the predecessor of the Internet.

Aunt Hilda
06-17-2013, 01:17 AM
it's difficult to choose a favourite :p

Smaug
06-17-2013, 01:23 AM
You forgot one: the writing.

Anglojew
06-17-2013, 05:47 AM
The most important invention was the fence/wall. Private property created Civilsation and everything that went along with it including writing, farming etc

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 06:16 AM
You forgot one: the writing.

The alphabet?

sido
06-17-2013, 06:36 AM
how do they really know when the wheel for example was invented? i doubt humans have been going for any long time withouth the wheel,its an easy thing to come up with,and so important

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 06:43 AM
how do they really know when the wheel for example was invented? i doubt humans have been going for any long time withouth the wheel,its an easy thing to come up with,and so important

The same could be applied to many inventions. Who knows when writing could have been invented? As far as we know there could be a hidden alphabet that hasn't been found yet. There's no reason to believe inventions were invented before they were first recorded otherwise dates for inventions would be useless and giving inventors credit for their work would be taken away from them because they wouldn't be able to prove that they were the first to invent their invention :rolleyes2:

sido
06-17-2013, 06:44 AM
Its true,it all makes no sense,i never believe the silly "it was invented then and then".,,now i am talking about basic stuff

Maximum Speed
06-17-2013, 06:45 AM
light a fire

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 06:46 AM
Its true,it all makes no sense,i never believe the silly "it was invented then and then"..please

Historians try their hardest to come up with a date using what they have found. Again, there is no reason to question what there is no evidence for. There is no evidence of the wheel being invented before 3500 BC. Until there is evidence, the wheel was invented in c.3500 BC

sido
06-17-2013, 06:47 AM
Well you can believe in it but i dont ,its the typical human "we want an answer for everything!"

For me,this is just the oldes they have found,,most probably older existed

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 06:54 AM
Well you can believe in it but i dont ,its the typical human "we want an answer for everything!"

For me,this is just the oldes they have found,,most probably older existed

What makes you think that? What evidence and logic is there for you to believe that wheels were invented by humans before c. 3500 BC?

sido
06-17-2013, 06:55 AM
human simpel logic,we never started to need it more,we always needed it,its almost basic

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 06:57 AM
human simpel logic,we never started to need it more,we always needed it,its almost basic

We didn't always need it. We only started to need it when we started to move large objects or large quantities of goods. Tell me, what use is a wheel in pre-urban civilisation?

sido
06-17-2013, 06:59 AM
you kidding? you dont think humans had large goods,or things to move from places,even if its for a short one its still a big relaxing if you have the wheel

it 100% existed before

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 07:04 AM
you kidding? you dont think humans had large goods,or things to move from places,even if its for a short one its still a big relaxing if you have the wheel

People carried some fruit and veggies in baskets and hunters carried their kill on sticks or on their shoulders. It was only when large groups of people banded together and created a 'town' did wheels become important.


it 100% existed before

Don't be an idiot. If it 100% existed then there would be physical evidence for it and we wouldn't be arguing over this. You're using the same logic religious people use to believe in deities; absence of proof is proof itself.

sido
06-17-2013, 07:17 AM
And you use the same logic too,dont you see it? you blindly believe that before a certain date(that we have NO IDEA about) there was no wheel just because someone with a "fancy profession name" says it

People never lived alone...always in groups

Anyway no reason to argue around this

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 07:22 AM
And you use the same logic too,dont you see it? you blindly believe that before a certain date(that we have NO IDEA about) there was no wheel just because someone with a "fancy profession name" says it

No, I don't use the same logic. You're saying that the wheel existed before based on you simply wanting to believe. There is no evidence. I believe the wheel was invented in 3500 BC because there is physical proof.


People never lived alone...always in groups

Early humans lived in small groups where wheels weren't needed.

sido
06-17-2013, 07:28 AM
even the need of 10 people will make your life much easier with a wheel! thats a fact,its also a fact there were always more than 10 people

no more comments!

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 08:34 AM
even the need of 10 people will make your life much easier with a wheel! thats a fact,its also a fact there were always more than 10 people

Not that much easier, that's why the wheel wasn't invented until hundreds of people banded together and craftsmen came into existence. More efficient farming methods meant less people needed to work so some people became craftsmen and essentially inventors. They found more efficient ways of doing various jobs.


no more comments!

You can't make ridiculous claims and expect no one to comment on it.

Gospodine
06-17-2013, 08:51 AM
how do they really know when the wheel for example was invented?

Because they didn't graduate from the Bosnian School of Ancient Alien Pyramidology.


you kidding? you dont think humans had large goods,or things to move from places,

Before the Neolithic Farming Revolution, the entirety of humanity lived in hunter-gatherer societies where material possessions were by necessity scarce.


it 100% existed before

Fashioning wood into the shape of a wheel and the required tool-making technology and by extension the auxiliary division of labour/stratification of social groups needed for that is not really possible several thousand years before the 3rd millennium BC when humans lived from hand-to-mouth and were busying themselves trying not to freeze to death.

sido
06-17-2013, 11:29 AM
Not that much easier, that's why the wheel wasn't invented until hundreds of people banded together and craftsmen came into existence. More efficient farming methods meant less people needed to work so some people became craftsmen and essentially inventors. They found more efficient ways of doing various jobs.


then this means you have never lived in a village or seen what kind of things people usually do


you have no knowledge and speak out of your ass just for the sake of it,you "have" to be right,i am ignoring you

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 11:31 AM
then this means you have never lived in a village or seen what kind of things people usually do

Villages didn't exist before 3500 BC :picard1:

sido
06-17-2013, 11:35 AM
gathered human communities did

ps:we dont know that either for exact

Vasconcelos
06-17-2013, 11:35 AM
then this means you have never lived in a village or seen what kind of things people usually do

:rofl:

Graham
06-17-2013, 11:40 AM
The wheel was probably only a natural progress.

Before the wheel, we all know people were doing rolly-pollies & pencil rolls down hills. They kicked stones about.

sido
06-17-2013, 11:42 AM
The wheel was probably only a natural progress.

Before the wheel, we all know people were doing rolly-pollies & pencil rolls down hills. They kicked stones about.

true

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 11:51 AM
gathered human communities did

That's not a village. Would you call a group of people camping in the forest a village?


ps:we dont know that either for exact

Go back to school.

sido
06-17-2013, 11:55 AM
:picard1:

Alenka
06-17-2013, 11:57 AM
Historians try their hardest to come up with a date using what they have found. Again, there is no reason to question what there is no evidence for. There is no evidence of the wheel being invented before 3500 BC. Until there is evidence, the wheel was invented in c.3500 BC
"The world's oldest wooden wheel, dating from 5,250 ± 100 BP, ..."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheel#History

"Radiocarbon dating, performed in the VERA laboratory (Vienna Environmental Research Accelerator) in Vienna, showed that it is 5,250 ± 100 years old, which makes it the oldest wooden wheel discovered by archeologists in the world."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ljubljana_Marshes_Wooden_Wheel

Methmatician
06-17-2013, 12:19 PM
"The world's oldest wooden wheel, dating from 5,250 ± 100 BP, ..."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheel#History

"Radiocarbon dating, performed in the VERA laboratory (Vienna Environmental Research Accelerator) in Vienna, showed that it is 5,250 ± 100 years old, which makes it the oldest wooden wheel discovered by archeologists in the world."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ljubljana_Marshes_Wooden_Wheel

I don't know if Sido knew, but we were talking about the wheel as transport. I already knew circles existed.

el22
06-17-2013, 12:47 PM
Sido has a point. When you discover an artifact, and assuming you are able to evaluate it's date, you can't say "it was invented then". This expression implies that you know for sure it didn't exist before. But how can you possibly know that?
The less speculative (and correct) way to name it, is: "It existed at least since then".

Sisak
06-18-2013, 03:25 PM
The most important invention was the fence/wall. Private property created Civilsation and everything that went along with it including writing, farming etc

I think this is true. If we looks which were great civilizations, they were the ones who had the fortified cities, and in the Balkans, there were villages with a fence (Sopot culture) in Croatia.

I would like to add more to this list and these ships found in Croatia in city of Vukovar:
Virtual reconstruction VUCEDOL II. of 3500 year old prehistoric logboat located in Vukovar, Croatia. Logboat was reconstructed by original logboats:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwzJtj4kczc