Who invented the microscope?


 



 



               The inventor of the microscope is still disputed. During the first century AD itself, the Romans invented glass, and tried out many uses of the substance, including microscopic views.



               However, the most noted microscope was developed by a Dutch duo, Hans and Zacharias Janssen. They invented the first compound microscope in the 16th century. They discovered that, if they put a lens at the top and bottom of a tube and looked through it, objects at the other end became magnified.



               Later, Anton van Leeuwenhoek improved the microscope. Using handcrafted microscopes, he became the first person to observe single celled organisms. These preliminary microscopes had many drawbacks like distortion. These were sorted out over the centuries, especially with the introduction of the electron microscope.



Picture credit: google



 


 


When did plastic first come into being?


               The word plastic originates from the Greek language; it means ‘fit for moulding’ in Greek. Materials with naturally plastic qualities have been used for thousands of years. Some historians trace the invention of modern plastic to the English chemist Alexander Parkes, when he made imitation ivory combs. His experiment began by adding nitric acid to cellulose. He then used camphor to shape the resulting material, cellulose nitrate. He called it Parkesine. In the 19th century various types of plastics were introduced in the market. Bakelite, a kind of plastic, was invented in 1907 by Leo Baekeland.



               On March 27th, 1933, the first industrially practical polyethylene synthesis was discovered by Eric Fawcett and Reginald Gibson, in North-wich, England. It was easily moulded, and was used from 1939 as a cable insulator, and in radar components. The first polythene household product was a washing-up bowl, made in 1948.





Picture credit: google



 


 




 



Why is it said that the history of rubber began in ancient times?

               The earliest archaeological evidence of the use of natural latex comes from the Olmec culture. They cultivated natural latex from rubber tree for making rubber balls for games. The Aztec and Maya are also known to have made rubber using natural latex. By 1615, Spanish troops in South America were using a resin from Para rubber trees, to waterproof their cloaks.



               Joseph Priestly is said to have discovered rubber’s erasing properties. However, it is the British engineer Edward Nairne who is generally credited with developing the first rubber eraser in Europe. Giovanni Fabbroni is credited with the discovery of naphtha as a rubber solvent in 1779. In 1834, Charles Goodyear managed to find a way to harden rubber and make it waterproof and pliant. This was later patented by Thomas Hancock.





 



 



 



 



 



Pictuers credit: google


When did the usage of colour first begin?


               Ancient men used a variety of colours naturally collected from plants - madder, saffron, indigo, oak apples and myrtle. Wood smouldered to charcoal   was used to make deep black colour. Local minerals were another rich source of colour. Indigo is the oldest dye of all. Many minerals exhibit various colours; the varieties are mainly due to impurities, or a slight change in chemical composition.



               The oldest dyed fabrics were found in Egypt, dating from 2000 BC. However, the invention of dyeing was probably much older. In 1856, while attempting to produce quinine, William Henry Perkin accidentally synthesized mauve, the earliest synthetic dye. Later, other man-made dyes appeared, but the most significant was a synthetic version of alizarin by Heinrich Caro in 1869.



               In the 18th century, England was a hive of paint innovation. Linseed oil and zinc oxide became increasingly available. Mixed together they composed the new paints. A much whiter pigment titanium dioxide came into use after First World War.




Picture credit: google



 


When did drilling for fuel first begin?


               Oil and natural gas were formed from the remains of prehistoric plants and animals, and that’s why they’re called fossil fuels.



               This happened millions of years ago when plant and animal remains settled into the sea bed along with salt, silt and rocks.



               In AD 300, while drilling for brine, the Chinese accidentally came across natural gas, and learned how to extract it and use it.



               From the 9th century BC, people of the Middle East burned tarry bitumen, which they found seeping from the Earth’s surface. In 1908, oil was found near the city of Masjed Soleiman, in Iran by a British prospecting team funded by William D’Arcy. This event significantly changed the history of the Middle East.



               The demand for petrol increased after the invention of the combustion engine and vehicles driven by petrol engines.



Picture credit: google


Why is India considered as the birthplace of diamonds?


               The Indians discovered diamonds before the 4th millennium BC. The name diamond is derived from the Greek word ‘adamas’, which means impenetrable. This valued gem was traded between India and Mesopotamia. They have been used as a display of prosperity ever since.



               The first diamond discoveries in South Africa were alluvial. Diamonds were found on volcanic rocks in farms in Kimberley, South Africa in 1870. Till then, diamonds were always dug from sand and gravel. For a long time the world’s most important rough diamond producers were South Africa, Congo, and the former Soviet Union.



               In the 15th century, tools were invented to cut facets into diamonds. Until then, the stones were simply polished, or shaped into a dome, known as a cabochon. The largest diamond in the world is the ‘Star of Africa I’, or ‘Cullinan I’, which is a colourless diamond, set in the British monarch’s sceptre.



Pictures credit: google


From where did gold originate?



 



               Gold has always been one of the most valued metals of all time.



               Gold’s malleability and non-decaying properties made it popular in the Middle East about 6000 years ago.



               Gold was found on riverbeds, and was filtered from sand.



               Because gold is dispersed widely throughout the geologic world, its discovery occurred to many different groups in many different locales.



               Early civilizations equated gold with gods and rulers, and gold was sought in their name, and dedicated to their glorification.



Pictures credit: google



 

When was steel discovered?


               It was after 1856 that the mass production of steel began, when English inventor Henry Bessemer found a way to convert pig iron to steel, a stronger and more malleable metal.



               To make steel, iron ore is first mined from the ground. It is then smelted in blast furnaces where the impurities are removed, and carbon is added. In fact, steel is nothing but iron alloyed with carbon. Today, it is generally accepted that stainless steel was manufactured in Europe sometime in the early 20th century.



               The car manufacturer Henry Ford pioneered the use of high tensile sheet metal for car bodies in 1908. He discovered that any steel containing 15 per cent chromium does not rust.



                From the 1920s, this steel was used in refrigerators and washing machines.





Pictures credit: google



 




 




 


When did iron first originate?


               The story of iron’s origins is astronomical; with the element being born from the explosion of stars. In Egypt, they called it the metal from heaven. The Bronze Age ended with the beginning of the Iron Age in 1500 BC, about the time the Hittites may have started working with iron, and discovered a way of smelting iron from local ores. Around 600 BC, cast iron was made by the Chinese by melting iron containing phosphorous.



             In the West, the first cast iron was a 14th century material. When fired with charcoal, the iron absorbed a significant amount of carbon, which lowered its melting point. Cast iron cannons and medieval iron changed the face of warfare.



              In Britain, the iron from furnaces was known as pig iron, as it was a mass of iron roughly resembling the shape of a reclining pig. However, pig iron was too brittle for most heavy industrial uses.




Pictures credit: google



What is the story of copper and bronze?


               It was the people from the south-eastern part of Turkey who discovered copper for the first time, more than 9000 years ago. They found that copper could be obtained from the shiny rocks of the region. However, copper’s name comes from Cyprus, which supplied much of the metal to the ancient world.



               Though copper was a popular metal its value was noted only since the 17th century, when it was realized that the metal is a great conductor of heat. Later, in the 19th century, copper was proved to be the second best conductor of electricity after silver.



               Use of the metal bronze became widespread in Europe during the Bronze Age, around 2000 BC. Bronze was made by heating the metals tin and copper, and mixing them together. Bronze objects are highly resistant to decay, and are still found in many ancient sites around the world.



Pictures credit: google


Why is the history of the wedge and screw interesting?

               Since the Stone Age, people started using wedges to raise boulders far enough to insert levers. Quarrymen in Egypt later started using wedges made of bronze and wood to split rocks and huge stones.



               The axes used by homo erectus used a principle similar to that of the wedge. Later, axe heads made of stone were attached to wooden handles to make more effective tools.



               Archimedes described screws in the 3rd century BC, when he mentioned that they were used for pumping. They were made of wood. The Greeks and Romans employed the screw to press grapes and olives.





 



 



 



 



 



 



 




Pictures credit: google



 


 



 



When did the history of the lever and pulley begin?


               Man started using things similar to levers to lift and move heavy things since the Stone Age. In the 3rd century BC, the Greek mathematician Archimedes explained how levers worked.



               During the early days, for the construction of their many great buildings, the Greeks used something called a winch to raise heavy things. A winch was kind of like a combination of a roller and a lever.



               It is believed that the Egyptians were the first people to use something similar to the modern-day pulley. Though not exactly a pulley, they used to run ropes over smooth timbers to alter the direction of movement while raising heavy stones.



               Compound pulleys were described before AC 100 by the Greek scholar Hero of Alexandria. A compound pulley is fixed and movable hence forms a block and tackle, which can have several pulleys mounted or the fixed and moving axles, thereby increasing the amount of force.



Picture credit: google



 

When was the wheel invented?


               The invention of the wheel must be the most iconic invention of all time, as it paved the way for so much development in the world.



               The first form of the wheel was made during the late Neolithic. Early wheels were simple wooden disks with a hole for the axle. However, the first wheel closer in appearance to the modern day one, was made in Sumeria around 3500 BC.



               Researchers have found that almost during the same period of time in Uruk in Mesopotamia, sledges were attached to four wheels to use in different terrains. The evolution of the modern day wheel was a very slow process. In 200 BC, in North Africa, wheels with teeth or cogs around their edges were used to pull water from wells.



               In the 4th century BC, the Greek philosopher Aristotle mentioned something similar to gears, when he designed devices for various construction jobs.




Picture credit: google



 



 


What is the history of purses and bags?


 



               Ever since mankind understood the necessity of keeping their valuables safe, they started finding ways to protect such personal belongings. Initially, men used to wrap such valuables in fabric to keep them inside their clothing. By the early 13th century, this fabric enclosure method had paved the way for creating pouches, bags and purses made of leather, fur or cloth. After the introduction of briefcases in the market, purses were used only to carry coins, and bags and pouches to carry other casual things.



               It was in the 1850s that a modern day leather handbag was first made. Shoulder bags were first introduced for women in the forces, during the Second World War.




Picture credit: google




 


From which era did the history of perfumes begin?


               Perfumes were mostly used in the form of incense. The word perfume is derived from the Latin word ‘per’, meaning ‘through’ and ‘fumus’ meaning ‘fumes’.



               On special ceremonial occasions the Egyptians carried scented fat that melted in the heat, which they used to perfume their hair, faces and bodies. Around 1350 BC, the Egyptians and Arabs began to distil perfume from the Madonna lily. Perfumes became more popular in European culture from the 1100s.



               The perfume consisting of a blend of neroli essential oil, rosemary and bergamot, made by two Italians based in Cologne, became popular during the seven years’ war of 1756-63. It was only much later in 1923, that the first perfumes to contain synthetic odours were created by the Frenchman Ernest Beaux.



Picture credit: google