Who are the people with the world's major inventions when were they invented

Around 4 million years B.C., prehistoric people in East Africa invented stone knives and pebble tools

Around 20,000 years B.C., a 20,000-year-old

bone sewing needle was found in a cave in the Dordon River district of France

Around 10,000 years B.C., Mediterranean coastline inhabitants had already invented fishing with nets

Around 7,500 years B.C., an ancient short oar was unearthed at York's Junction Marshes in the UK, indicating that humans

had already invented boats at that time. In about 7500 B.C.E., ancient oars unearthed at York's Junction Marshes in the United Kingdom showed that humans

had already invented boats

In 4000 B.C.E., the Missobudamians invented cuneiform, which was adopted by the Sumerians and by the Persians, Babylonians, and Assyrians with whom they traded

In 3500 B.C.E., one of the Sumerians from Missobudamia A Sumerian in Mesopotamia in 3500 B.C. possessed a seal with the image of a plough,

the earliest known agricultural tool in the shape of a plough

In 2000 B.C., the Mesopotamians invented the technique of wall-barrier construction

In 1500 B.C., the Hittites were on the warpath, and the invention of iron-smelting technology was spread from Natolia to neighboring areas

Circa 11th century B.C., the Chinese were the first to invent ceramics. The Chinese were the first to invent porcelain

In the 5th to 4th centuries B.C., China invented and built the world's longest defensive wall, the Wanli

Wall

In the 3rd century B.C., 280 to 220, Li Bing creatively invented and designed and constructed the famous water conservancy project, the Dujiangyan, which is the first to be built in China.

In 255 B.C., the first lighthouse invented in Egypt was erected in the harbor of Alexandria

In 130 B.C., the turbine was invented by Hiero of Alexandria

In 10 B.C., the crane was first mentioned by Vitruvius, the Roman architect and writer, in his writings

In 105 A.D., Cai Lun of China invented the Great Wall in the Western Han Dynasty, which was built by the Chinese emperor Cai Lun in the third century. Cai Lun of China invents "Cai Hou Paper," based on the Western Han Dynasty's "Baqiao Paper," which can be used by the general public

In 27-97 A.D., Wang Chong of the Eastern Han Dynasty writes about guiding tools in his book, "Lun Heng - Yi Ying" (On the Balance - Yes Yes).

-The invention of Sinan

Between 78 and 139 A.D., Zhang Heng invented and manufactured the "Waiting Wind Geodetic Apparatus" for determining the direction of earthquakes, and at the same time, he manufactured the world's first astronomical instrument, the "Water Transportation Humbrological Apparatus. "

The first astronomical instrument in the world was made at the same time. ~208 years, the Eastern Han Dynasty, Hua Tuo first anesthesia surgery, the first appendix surgery

225 ~ 295 years AD, Liu Hui completed the mathematical masterpiece "nine chapters of arithmetic" and the first decimal fractions,

cut circle, reconstruction of the theory of redifference

362 years AD, the Roman Emperor Milly first hospitals, sheltering the sick citizens

605 AD ~ 611 years, China invented the construction of the world's first astronomical instrument "water transport Hunxiang instrument" at the same time

605 ~? 611 A.D., China invents and builds the Beijing-Hangzhou Grand Canal, the world's earliest, largest and longest

man-made waterway

581 to 682 A.D., Sun Simiao invents catheterization, the first treatment for foot fungus

635 A.D., St. Isidore of Seville, Spain, records that he has invented a new method of catheterization, which is the first in the world to be used for the treatment of foot fungus. Isidore recorded the invention of the plume feather manufacturing plume feather

pen.

In 700 A.D., the Spaniards invented the Tero iron smelting furnace, which was the prototype of the modern blast furnace

In 683-727 A.D., the Chinese monk and his line of work pioneered the most advanced calendar, "Taiyen Calendar", and invented the world's earliest clocks and watches, the Huntian copper meter and the Zodiac travel instrument to measure the orbit of the sun

The Zodiac travel instrument is the first of its kind in the world, and it is also the most advanced in the world. The world's earliest clock, the Huntian Bronze Gauge, and the Zodiac Traveler, which measured the orbit of the sun, were invented by Bisheng. ~In 1031-1095 AD, Shen Kuo wrote the 26-volume scientific masterpiece "Mengxi Bianan", in which he first recorded the discovery of magnetic declination

In 1450 AD, the German Johann Gutenberg invented the printing press

In 1489 AD, the German Wiedemann published a book on arithmetic in Leipzig. In 1489, the German Wiedemann published a book on arithmetic in Leipzig, first using

the plus (+) and minus (-)

In 1511 A.D., the German Nuremberg Tietzahanlain invented the watch for timekeeping

In 1565 A.D., the Swiss Diaspora of Zurich was the first to describe the manufacture of pencils

In 1568 A.D., the French mathematician Bélin invented the threading lathe, which cut screws to a uniform specification

In 1490 A.D., the German Wiedemann published a book in Leipzig on arithmetic. In 1568, the French mathematician Bélin invented the thread-lathe, which cut screws to a uniform size

In 1569, the Flemish geographer McCarter invented the "McCarter's Projection" to

map the world

In 1585, the Flemish engineer Stevin was the first to invent the use of decimals, but did not yet know how to

Use decimals. p>

Using the decimal point

In 1589 A.D., the Englishman William Lee invented the knitting machine

In 1518-1593 A.D., Li Shizhen wrote the book "Compendium of Materia Medica," which has long been regarded as the classical text of Chinese medicine

In 1590 A.D., the Jansen father and son of the Netherlands invented the microscope

In 1680 A.D., Middelmann of the Netherlands invented a microscope, and in 1680, Middelmann of the Netherlands invented a microscope, and in 1680, Middelmann of the Netherlands invented a microscope. In 1680, Hans Lieberthy, a spectacle worker in Middelburg, Netherlands, invented the telescope and demonstrated it to members of the Dutch

parliament

In 1609, Galileo of Italy invented the air thermometer

In 1562 to 1633, Xu Guangxiang of China invented the microscope. In 1633, Xu Guangqi of China wrote "The Complete Book of Agricultural Politics", an ancient encyclopedia of agriculture in China

In 1631 A.D., the mathematician Otred of London's Thorley Place, England, was the first to use the multiplication sign (x) in his book "The Key to Mathematics."

In 1641 A.D., the Scottish mathematician Napier invented the logarithm.

In 1643 A.D., Torricelli of Italy invented the mercury barometer

In 1646 A.D., Kircher of Germany invented the slide light

In 1650 A.D., Griecke of Germany invented the air pump

In 1656 A.D., Huygens of Holland, a mathematician, invented the pendulum clock for timekeeping, and in 1657 he put a hairspring in a chronograph

This was the first time that a multiplication sign (x) was used. In 1657, he put a hairspring in the chronograph to make the pendulum rotate more regularly

From 1587 to 1661 A.D., Song Yingxing of China wrote Tian Gong Kai Wu, which was regarded as "China's 17th

century encyclopedia of craftsmanship"

In 1666 A.D., Isaac Newton of England pioneered the method of calculus at the University of Cambridge, and in 1668, he invented

The calculus method. In 1668, he invented the reflecting telescope

In 1679 A.D., the French physicist Babin invented the pressure cooker while living in London

In 1696 A.D., the first person in the West to invent the use of envelopes was the Scottish Minister of State, Ogilvie

In 1701 A.D., the sowing machine was invented in the English laboratory at Tall, Berkshire, eliminating the need for hand sowing of seeds. In 1701, Tarr invented the sowing machine at his laboratory in Berkshire, England, which eliminated the waste caused by hand sowing

In 1709, Darby of Shropshire, England, pioneered the "Coke Iron Method", which improved the quality of iron products

Italian Christopher invented the envelope, which was first used by Scottish Minister of State Ogilvie. Italian Christopher invented the piano

In 1712 A.D., Englishman Nucor Mann invented the piston steam engine, from which the world entered the "Age of Steam"

In 1716 A.D., Swedish engineer Trivold invented a system for heating all parts of a house

by using hot water piped in. p>

Method of heating all parts of the house

In 1720 A.D., Fahrenheit of Germany invented the mercury thermometer

In 1733 A.D., John Kay, a Lancashire weaver, invented the flying shuttle, a mechanized and fast weaving tool

In 1741 A.D., Regensius of Sweden invented the shuttle, which was used for the weaving of cloth. In 1741, Regence of Sweden invented the percent temperature scale, which divides the freezing to boiling temperature of water into 100

equivalent parts and is used to express the numerical value of the temperature

In 1748 A.D., Zansen of Germany invented the fountain pen

In 1752 A.D., Franklin of the United States of America invented the lightning rod

In 1767 A.D., Hargreaves of Great Britain invented the jenny. In 1767, Hargreaves of England invented the Jenny Spinning Machine

In 1769, Actonite of England patented the hydraulic spinning machine and put it into operation in 1771

In 1777, Watt of England invented the independent condenser steamer

Vaporizer

In 1779, Crompton of England invented the walking spindle machine

In 1783, Montgomery of France invented the spindle spinning machine

In 1783, Franklin of France invented the lightning rod

American scientist Franklin invented the lightning rod. In 1783, the Montgolfier brothers of France invented the hot-air balloon

In 1785, Cattertonett of England patented steam-powered machinery

In 1788, Watt and Bolton of England invented the rocking-arm steam engine

In 1792, Merkle of England invented the gas lamp

In 1795, after the French Revolution, France and its people invented the gas lamp

The French Revolution, the French Revolution, and the French Revolution, the French Revolution, the French Revolution, the French Revolution, and the French Revolution. After the French Revolution, the metric system was first officially adopted in France and its territories

In 1800, Voltar of Italy invented the Voltar battery

In 1801, Dewey of England demonstrated the electric arc lamp at the British Institute of Science

In 1807, Fulton of the U.S. invented the steamboat

In 1814, Stephenson of England In 1814, Stephenson of England invented the steam locomotive

In 1818 A.D., David of England invented the miner's safety lamp

In 1923 A.D., physicists in England invented the electromagnet

In 1826 A.D., Niepce, who lived in France, invented the photographic technique

In 1827 A.D., John York of England invented friction matches

In 1829 A.D., a poor tailor in France invented the friction match. In 1829, a poor French tailor, Timonteil, invented the industrial sewing machine

In 1831, Faraday of England, the father of electronics, invented the epoch-making invention of the direct-current (DC) generator. Faraday also invented the transformer. The American Henry

Lee invented the electric bell

In 1837 AD, Davenport of the United States invented the practical electric motor. Morse of the United States invented the electric

newspaper

In 1839 A.D., Professor Page of the United States invented the electric locomotive; Macmillan of Great Britain invented the self-propelled

vehicle; Nesmith of Great Britain invented the steam hammer; and Goodyear of the United States invented vulcanized rubber

In 1840 A.D., the British physicist Wheatstone patented the linear induction motor

In 1840, the Englishman Wheatstone patented the linear induction motor.

In 1842 A.D., the American Morse invented the laying of cables on the bottom of New York Harbor for the transmission of telegrams

In 1852 A.D., the French Giffard invented the steam-powered airship; and Joan Foucauld of France invented the

torque

In 1855 A.D., electric arc street lamps were installed on the Rue Royale in Lyon, France

In 1856 A.D., the English physicist Wheatstone patented the linear induction motor

In 1856 A.D., the British Physics Department patented the electric motor.

In 1856, the Italians Barsanti and Matteucci invented the practical internal combustion engine; and in England

Bethimer invented the acid round stove, also known as the Bessie's rotary furnace

In 1859, the French physicist Bertrandet invented the practical accumulator battery

In 1862, Gatling of the U.S. invented the machine gun

In 1867, the Swedish Nobel Prize winner was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for his work in the field of physics. In 1867, the Swedish Nobel invented the yellow bomb; the American Westinghouse invented the air-brake

Car; the French chemist Le Ranchet invented the dry cell battery

In 1874 A.D., Salomon invented the motorized tricycle in England

In 1876 A.D., the American Bell invented the telephone and made the first telephone call

In 1877 A.D., the American inventor Thomas Edison invented the electric battery

The American inventor Thomas Edison invented the electric motorized tricycle in England. In 1877, the American inventor Thomas Edison invented the phonograph

In 1878, David Hughes of England invented the charcoal microphonograph

In 1880, Edison of the United States invented the electric lamp for street lighting

In 1881, Edison of the United States patented the stereo sound in Germany, which was used for cable radio broadcasts in Berlin; in Surrey, England, the first hydroelectric power plant was built at Godalming, England

The first electric power plant was built in the United States. The first hydroelectric power plant was put into production in Godalming, using a hydroelectric generator made by Siemens, which supplied commercial power to factories, streets, and residences

In 1882 A.D., the first trolleybus invented by Siemens in Germany was demonstrated in Berlin

In 1883 A.D., Averett in England invented a theft-proof vending machine to sell post cards

In 1883 A.D., Edison in America patented stereo in Germany for cable radio broadcasting in Berlin

In 1977, the first trolleybus in the United States was patented in Germany.

In 1884, Parsons of England invented the modern steam turbine; Waterman of the United States invented the practical

tap pen

In 1885, Daimler of Germany invented the automobile; and Merkinsale of the United States invented the row-type movable type casting

rowing machine

In 1888, Dunlop of the United Kingdom invented the pneumatic boat

In 1889, Everett of the United Kingdom invented the first trolleybus

The first demonstration of the trolleybus was held in Berlin. p>In 1889, the first factory in Chicago, USA, invented a tractor suitable for farms, with an engine fueled by

gasoline

In 1890, the Underground Railroad invented in Britain was opened to traffic between the City of London and South London

In 1894, the Baltimore-Oklahoma Railroad of the United States was electrified; New York, USA

The Baltimore-Oklahoma Railroad was electrified; the New York City Railroad of the United States was electrified. In 1894, the Baltimore-Oklahoma Railroad in the United States was electrified; the Holland Brothers Movie Theatre on Broadway in New York City, USA, showed movies for the first time

In 1895, R?ntgen in Germany invented the X-ray tube; Marconi in Italy demonstrated the use of the radio near Porvoo, Italy, at the age of 20; and the Lumière Brothers in France first projected a movie image on a screen in Paris for an audience to view.

In 1896, Dowsing, an electrical engineer from London, England, invented the starter

motor for attaching electric motors to automobiles; Professor Fessington demonstrated the use of wireless telephones in the United States; and American Fisher invented an electric washing machine that was produced and marketed

In 1903, Weir, along with Biovale and Wright, invented the motorized airplane

In 1903, Will and Biovale invented the motorized airplane

In 1904, the Lumière brothers in France demonstrated the use of radio near Lonard. p>In 1904, Fleming invented the two-pole vacuum tube

In 1906, Beckland invented the electric motor in the United States; DeForest invented the three-pole vacuum tube in the United States

In 1914, Swindon, England, invented the military tanker

In 1922, the first set of talkies, The Arsonist, was made in Berlin

In 1923, Sulukin, the United States, invented the electric washing machine and sold it to the public. In 1923, Sulukin of the United States invented the photoelectric tube for television

In 1926, the Spaniards Baird and de la Cierva invented the television set, and demonstrated the reception of images by electric

vision in London

In 1928, the Chinese Hou Deping invented the Hou's combined alkali method; and Ricardo Ricardeze and Ricardo Riperts of the United Kingdom cooperated to invent the world's first automated working robot, from which the world entered the world's first automated working robot. The world entered the "electronic age" with the invention of the first automatic working robot by Ricardez and Rieffel in Britain;

The invention of the television tube by Farnsworth in the United States

The first gas pedal was built by Cocrott and Walton at the University of Cambridge in the United States in 1930, which shot particles into atoms. Carothers invented the nylon; Whittle of England invented the jet engine

In 1931 A.D., Professor Hahn of the Institute of Chemistry in Berlin, Germany, declared his experiment on splitting the nucleus of the atom

a success

In 1942 A.D., Fermi, a physicist of Italian origin, installed his invention of the world's first accelerator in a racquetball court at the University of Chicago

. on a squash court at the University of Chicago, setting off a sustained atomic reaction with the world's first atomic reactor, which he invented. From then on, the world

entered the "Atomic Age."

In 1943, an inventor invented the missile, and the Nazi Luftwaffe's He293 aircraft

first attacked the British battleship HMS White Heron with an air-to-surface missile; a Hungarian journalist, the HMS Egret, was attacked with an air-to-ground missile; and an Italian physicist, Fermi, was attacked with a missile by a Hungarian journalist. "The Hungarian journalist Polo patented the ballpoint

pen, which went into production in 1945

On July 16, 1945, the atomic bomb was successfully tested at Ramogordo Air Force Base in New Mexico, USA

Atomic bombs were used for the first time in the world on August 6, 1945, when the U.S. atomic bomb struck Japan

Atomic bombs were used for the first time in the world, when the U.S. atomic bomb struck Japan, the U.S. atomic bomb struck Japan. Japan

Hiroshima City, will be completely destroyed; U.S. scientists Eckert and Mochrie in the University of Pennsylvania

research, for the U.S. Army Ordnance invented and manufactured the world's first electronic computers, from which the world entered the

"information age"

A.D. In 1948, the United States, Shockley invented electric crystals; the United States, Bardeen, Bratton invented semiconductor crystals

Body transistors

A.D. 1949, the United States, inventors invented rockets from the United States of America, New Mexico, the White Sands Desert launch

"Viking" rockets hit a new record in just 54 and a half seconds to lift off 84 km

In 1950 A.D., the U.S. had Klee and other people with single-crystal germanium to make NPN crystalline transistors, contributing to the development of miniaturization of electronic technology

In 1952 A.D., the U.S. in the Pacific Ocean in the Marshall Islands, the success of the test explosion of the hydrogen bomb

In 1953 A.D., the British Cockrell invented the drum-wing aircraft

In 1954 A.D., the American inventors invented rockets.

In 1954, the Soviet Union built the first nuclear power plant in Obnisk and began supplying power to factories and farms

In 1957, Chinese Americans Chen-Ning Yang and Tsung-Dao Li first proposed the "Law of Unconservation of Usupply

in the presence of strong and weak interactions, and Chinese American Jian-Hsiung Wu proved the law of non-conservation of Usupply

in the presence of strong and weak interactions. Chinese-American Wu Jianxiong proved the "Law of Unconservation of Usupply", which solved the first riddle of atomic and nuclear physics. On October 4, 1957, the Soviet Union successfully launched the world's first man-made Earth

satellite, Mate 1, which weighed 84 kilograms and traveled at a speed of 17.5 kilometers per hour, bringing the world into the "space age". "

In 1960 A.D., American physical chemist Merman invented the world's first laser

In 1961 A.D., Soviet cosmonaut Gagarin drove the world's first manned spacecraft, "Vostok

One," in the western part of Siberia. "In 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Gagarin drove the world's first manned spacecraft, Vostok

One, to lift off in western Siberia and return successfully; Texas Instruments in Dallas, USA, developed and patented the integrated circuit, which has opened up a new situation for the use of silicon

chips

In 1964, Universal Business Machines Corporation (UBM) launched a laser. In 1964, Universal Business Machines sold tape-controlled typewriters in the United Kingdom and the United States,

with the dual functions of typewriters and computers, which was the world's first word processor

In 1971, the former Soviet Union successfully launched the "Salute" space station, and pocket-sized electronic

computers in the world.

Computer in the United States on the market; the United States International Communications Corporation research made micro-processor, in a piece of silicon

sheet contains the logic and calculation function of the overall computer, and obtained a patent, one of the world's high-tech electronic

brain to the global

A.D. 1973, the Chinese Yuan Longping, the first to breed the world's first strong indica hybrid rice, was

Chinese people, the first to be able to produce a strong advantage of indica hybrid rice, which was used by the

Chinese people.

Hailed as the "Father of Chinese Hybrid Rice"

In 1974, Chinese-American Ding Zhaozhong discovered subatomic particles and named them "Ding" particles,

this discovery enhanced people's understanding of the basis of particles, for which he was awarded the 1976 Nobel Prize in Physics.

The discovery improved people's understanding of the basison particle, for which he was awarded the 1976 Nobel Prize in Physics; the invention of the visual telegraph was successful, and Britain's Fiddy developed an even more promising visual data system, which was put into

service in 1979

In 1978 A.D., collaboration between the physiologist Edwards and the gynecologist Steadfasto led to the birth of the first

test-tube baby at the General Hospital of the City of Aldan in the United Kingdom

. The first test-tube baby was born at Aldan General Hospital in the UK

In 1981, the US space shuttle Columbia, the world's first reusable spacecraft, flew on a successful test flight

In 1991, the US solar-powered aircraft Solar Challenger flew over the world's largest city in the world. "In 1991, the U.S.-developed Solar Challenger flew across the English Channel,

powered by 1.6 million solar cells on board

Chinese history of invention can't be written enough

Chinese invention can't be written enough

Chinese invention can be written more than one year ago.