Telephone, 1876 Scotsman Alexander Graham Bell developed his telephone in Boston. The first person he spoke to with his invention was his assistant, Watson.
Factory, 1771 When Richard Arkwright opened his water-powered mill in Cromford, England, he became the first person to combine several stages of production under one roof.
Anesthetic, 1846 American dentist William Morton was the first person to use anesthetic succesfully during surgery.
Steam locomotive, 1804
NORTH AMERICA
Air conditioning, 1902
Invented by Briton Richard Trevithick, the first locomotive ran on the road. By 1804, Trevithick had built and run locomotives designed for railroad tracks.
American Willis Carrier created the modern air-cooling Vaccine, 1796 machine, which English scientist Edward Jenner controlled both injected a vaccine (weakened air temperature or killed germs) into a patient’s and humidity. body to encourage it to fight the disease smallpox. It led to the development of vaccinations Lightbulb, 1879 for other diseases. Although bulbs had already been invented earlier, US inventor Thomas Movies, 1895 Edison developed a type of bulb that The cinématographe was could safely glow for up to 50 hours, invented by French brothers making it suitable for home use. August and Louis Lumière. The device was a combined camera and film projector, and it played a moving picture for several minutes at a public screening in Paris.
American brothers Orville and Wilbur Wright developed the first powered airplane, whose maiden flight lasted for 12 seconds and covered 120 ft (36 m).
Eraser, 1735 During an expedition to Ecuador, Frenchman Charles-Marie de la Condamine came across rubber. The material became famous back in Europe, and in 1770, Englishman Joseph Priestley discovered that it could rub out pencil marks, thus inventing the eraser.
120
PE
Radio, 1895 Italian Guglielmo Marconi transmitted and received radio signals at a distance of 1.5 miles (2.4 km).
AFRICA
Airplane, 1903
SOUTH AMERICA
EURO
Pasteurization, 1865 Frenchman Louis Pasteur discovered that liquid foods could be heated to destroy harmful bacteria without affecting their food value.
Piano, 1709 Italian Bartolomeo Cristofori developed the piano. Compared to earlier keyboard instruments, it allowed musicians much greater control of the loudness of notes, and it became a mainstay of Western music.
ALTHOUGH MODERN CANNED FOOD DATES BACK TO 1810, PEOPLE OPENED