Historical:Inventions

If necessity is the mother of invention, a logical place to start would be width basic human necessities.

As you add new inventions, try to intuitively place them in the correct sequence (historical order). 発明表Išradimai
 * 1) Air. At some point (Space Shuttle Atlantis) it will be necessary to store/transport/clean/produce it, but for now nature provides.
 * 2) Water. Information on how to locate freshwater resources in different kinds of habitat would be useful.
 * 3) Food. How to find and identify edible food sources would be important. So too would be to know how to prepare/cook it so as to minimize biochemical risk. How to cook brings us to our first necessary tool..
 * 4) Fire. Some basic uses for fire. Cooking, Fire can also be used as a tool to make..
 * 5) Spear with fire-hardened tip. Makes hunting more efficient.
 * 6) Fur coat.
 * 7) Levers.
 * 8) Hammer.
 * 9) Iron.
 * 10) Needle.
 * 11) Knife. (Using a knife, a variety of other carvings can be made!)
 * 12) Chisel.
 * 13) Spade. (Using its analogue we will later start mine oil! ;-))
 * 14) Rope.
 * 15) Salt.
 * 16) Brush.
 * 17) Table.
 * 18) Bottle.
 * 19) Archimede's water screw
 * 20) Astrolabe
 * 21) Catapult
 * 22) Compass
 * 23) Glass.
 * 24) Lens.
 * 25) Eyeglasses
 * 26) Gunpowder
 * 27) Steam engine
 * 28) Kite
 * 29) Marshmallow plant (Althea officinalis)
 * 30) Marshmallow candy
 * 31) Paper
 * 32) Scissors
 * 33) Silk
 * 34) Yo-yo
 * 35) Anemometer (for measuring the speed of wind)
 * 36) Terrestrial Globe (a map)
 * 37) Caravel
 * 38) Airplane
 * 39) Helicopter
 * 40) Canvas (a strong cotton cloth, could be used for making parachute)
 * 41) Light-weight silk (but very strong silk)
 * 42) Parachute
 * 43) Submarine
 * 44) Armored car
 * 45) Rapid-fire gun
 * 46) Centrifugal pump
 * 47) Ballista (a giant crossbow, by da Vinci)
 * 48) Worm gear (a set of gears in which many teeth make contact at once, reducing the strain on the teeth, allowing more pressure to be put on the mechanism)
 * 49) Printing press with movable type (guttenberg's)
 * 50) Screwdriver
 * 51) Compound microscope (a compound microscope is one which has more than one lens)
 * 52) Speed at which bodies fall does not depend on their weight
 * 53) Telescope
 * 54) Microscope
 * 55) Thermometer
 * 56) Barometer
 * 57) Cassegrain telescope
 * 58) Reflecting telescope
 * 59) Methods for grinding and polishing glass telescope lenses
 * 60) Refracting telescope
 * 61) Mercury barometer
 * 62) Battery
 * 63) Methane gas
 * 64) Bifocal glasses
 * 65) Carbonated water
 * 66) Celsius thermometer
 * 67) Cotton gin (a machine that cleans cotton, removing its many seeds)
 * 68) Lightning rod
 * 69) Franklin stove
 * 70) Guillotine
 * 71) Spinning jenny
 * 72) Hot-air balloon
 * 73) Electric arc
 * 74) Tungsten
 * 75) Light bulb
 * 76) Mayonnaise
 * 77) Metric system
 * 78) Piano (the pianoforte)
 * 79) Sandwich
 * 80) Sextant (replacement of astrolabe)
 * 81) Watt's steam engine (later was used for draining mines, powering looms in textile factories, powering bellows, paper mills)
 * 82) Steam-powered boat (by Henry Bell)
 * 83) Braille (writing system)
 * 84) Can
 * 85) Can opener
 * 86) Electric motor
 * 87) Electric streetcar
 * 88) Dishwasher
 * 89) Dutch chocolate (Dutching, Dutch processing or alkalinisation).
 * 90) Kindergarten
 * 91) Sewing machine
 * 92) Nylon fabric
 * 93) Kelvin scale
 * 94) Scythe
 * 95) Reel lawn mower
 * 96) Mechanical crops reaper
 * 97) Telegraph machine
 * 98) Morse Code
 * 99) Pasteurization
 * 100) Rubber band
 * 101) Safety pin
 * 102) Saxophone
 * 103) Helium
 * 104) Lithium
 * 105) Beryllium
 * 106) Boron
 * 107) Carbon
 * 108) Nitrogen
 * 109) Oxygen
 * 110) Fluorine
 * 111) Neon
 * 112) Natrium
 * 113) Magnesium
 * 114) Aluminium
 * 115) Silicon
 * 116) Chlorine
 * 117) Argon
 * 118) Potassium
 * 119) Calcium
 * 120) Scandium
 * 121) Titanium
 * 122) Vanadium
 * 123) Chromium
 * 124) Manganese
 * 125) Cobalt
 * 126) Nickel
 * 127) Copper
 * 128) Zinc
 * 129) Gallium
 * 130) Germanium
 * 131) Arsenic
 * 132) Selenium
 * 133) Bromine
 * 134) Krypton
 * 135) Rubidium
 * 136) Strontium
 * 137) Yttrium
 * 138) Zirconium
 * 139) Niobium
 * 140) Molybdenum
 * 141) Technetium
 * 142) Ruthenium
 * 143) Rhodium
 * 144) Palladium
 * 145) Silver
 * 146) Cadmium
 * 147) Indium
 * 148) Tin
 * 149) Antimony
 * 150) Tellurium
 * 151) Iodine
 * 152) Xenon
 * 153) Caesium
 * 154) Barium
 * 155) Lanthanum
 * 156) Cerium
 * 157) Praseodymium
 * 158) Neodymium
 * 159) Promethium
 * 160) Samarium
 * 161) Europium
 * 162) Gadolinium
 * 163) Terbium
 * 164) Dysprosium
 * 165) Holmium
 * 166) Erbium
 * 167) Thulium
 * 168) Ytterbium
 * 169) Lutetium
 * 170) Hafnium
 * 171) Tantalum
 * 172) Tungsten
 * 173) Rhenium
 * 174) Osmium
 * 175) Iridium
 * 176) Platinum
 * 177) Gold
 * 178) Mercury
 * 179) Thallium
 * 180) Lead
 * 181) Bismuth
 * 182) Polonium
 * 183) Astatine
 * 184) Radon
 * 185) Francium
 * 186) Radium
 * 187) Actinium
 * 188) Thorium
 * 189) Protactinium
 * 190) Uranium
 * 191) Neptunium
 * 192) Plutonium
 * 193) Amercium
 * 194) Curium
 * 195) Berkelium
 * 196) Californium
 * 197) Einsteinium
 * 198) Fermium
 * 199) Mendelevium
 * 200) Nobelium
 * 201) Lawrencium
 * 202) Rutherfordium
 * 203) Dubnium
 * 204) Seaborgium
 * 205) Bohrium
 * 206) Hassium
 * 207) Meitnerium
 * 208) Darmstadtium
 * 209) Roentgenium
 * 210) Ununbium
 * 211) Ununtrium
 * 212) Ununquadium
 * 213) Ununpentium
 * 214) Ununhexium
 * 215) Saxhorn
 * 216) Aneroid barometer
 * 217) Velox photographic paper
 * 218) Bakelite (an inexpensive, nonflammable, versatile, and very popular plastic)
 * 219) Storage batteries (lead-based batteries that can be recharged)
 * 220) Dry cell (a voltaic cell with a cylindrical zinc shell (the zinc acts as both the cathode and the container) that is lined with an ammonium chloride (the electrolyte) saturated material (and not a liquid).
 * 221) Alkaline batteries (edison batteries)
 * 222) Telephone
 * 223) Hydroairplane
 * 224) Photo-sensitive selenium cell (the photophone, a wireless phone, developed with Sumner Tainter)
 * 225) Braille typewriter
 * 226) Bunsen burner (laboratory)
 * 227) Russet Burbank potato (also called the Idaho potato)
 * 228) Mechanical cash register
 * 229) Electric cash register
 * 230) Electric car ignition
 * 231) Celluloid (a plastic made from cellulose (it is derived from plants))
 * 232) Coca-Cola
 * 233) Cotton candy (a soft confection that is made from sugar that is heated and spun into slim threads that look like a mass of cotton)
 * 234) Dry plate method (photography}
 * 235) Incandescent electric light bulb
 * 236) Phonograph record
 * 237) Carbon telephone transmitter
 * 238) Motion-picture projector
 * 239) Elevator
 * 240) Escalator
 * 241) Gyroscope
 * 242) Foucault pendulum
 * 243) Steel ribbed umbrella
 * 244) Fountain pen
 * 245) Folding cabinet bed (a space-saver that folded up against the wall into a cabinet)
 * 246) Hot dogs
 * 247) Metal zipper device with locking teeth in
 * 248) Safety matches
 * 249) Radio (wireless telegraphy)
 * 250) Steam engine lubricator
 * 251) Motorcycle
 * 252) Nobel patent detonator (detonating nitroglycerin using a strong electrical shock instead of heat)
 * 253) Dynamite
 * 254) Paper clip
 * 255) Potato chip
 * 256) Push pin ("a thumbtack with an elongated handle that makes it easier to put in and remove")
 * 257) Rayon (a cellulose-based fiber that is made from wood pulp or cotton waste)
 * 258) Records (used to record sound)
 * 259) Revolving door
 * 260) Multiple effect vacuum sugar evaporator (by Norbert Rillieux)
 * 261) X-rays
 * 262) Tractor
 * 263) Typewriter
 * 264) Vacuum cleaner
 * 265) Cylinder pin-tumbler lock
 * 266) Kerosene.
 * 267) Kerosene lamp.
 * 268) Drawing-board.
 * 269) Pencil.
 * 270) Acumulator (electricity acumulator)
 * 271) Toothpaste (material)
 * 272) Slide rule (calculation tool)
 * 273) Rubber (material)
 * 274) Phosphorus (material)
 * 275) Sulphur (material)
 * 276) Polyethylene (material)
 * 277) Hydrogen (material)
 * 278) Atlas-II (rocket engine)
 * 279) Hydrazine (chemical material)
 * 280) 1,1-Dimethylhydrazine (material)
 * 281) Nitrogen tetroxide (material)
 * 282) Aerozine 50 (material, rocket engine fuel)
 * 283) Delta-I (rocket engine)
 * 284) Delta-II (rocket engine)
 * 285) Delta-III (rocket engine)
 * 286) Delta-IV (rocket engine)
 * 287) Space Shuttle Atlantis (spacecraft)
 * 288) Auto CAD.
 * 289) Autodesk Inventor.
 * 290) SolidWorks.
 * 291) Titan-IV (rocket engine)
 * 292) Taurus-XL (rocket engine)
 * 293) Add an invention

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