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Timetables TM of technology : a chronology of the most important people and events in the history of technology

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York Simon and Schuster 1993Description: vi,490pISBN:
  • 0671769189
Subject(s):
DDC classification:
  • 745.2 BUN
Contents:
CONTENTS Notes on conventions and abbreviations v The Stone Ages: 2,400,000-4000 BC vi The best rocks 2 Fire: The second key tool 4 Stone technology of the Old Stone Age 9 The first navigators 11 The first ceramics 4 Stone technology of the Middle Stone Age and Neolithic 16 New materials: Tooth, bone, and horn 18 The first machines 20 Machines that go around 22 The Metal Ages: 4000 BC -1000 CE 24 Irrigation and the rise of civilization 27 Metals and early smelting 28 The invention of the wheel .30 Inventing and writing numbers .31 City life 32 Early sailing 35 Building with brick and stone 44 Inventing writing and the alphabet 49 Paddles and oars 51 Domes, beams, and columns 52 Arches 53 Cast iron (part 1) 55 Archimedes 56 Hero of Alexandria 61 Salt and the fall of civilizations 71 What caused the Agricultural Revolution? (part 1) 75 What caused the Agricultural Revolution? (part 2) What caused the Agricultural Revolution? (part 3) 79 The first great explorers 83 How the Egyptians did NOT build the pyramids 84 How the Egyptians DID build the pyramids 85 The Age of Water and Wind: 1000-1732 86 Cathedrals 90 Early surgery 92 Waterpower 94 Al-Jazari 99 Why is there no Classic steam engine? 101 Wind power 103 Francis Bacon and the scientific method 112 Leonardo da Vinci 118 Johann Gutenberg 119 Old and New World plants meet 128 Pendulum myths 144 Early clocks 146 Gunpowder and guns in East and West 147 Perpetual motion (part 1): An old dream 150 Recognizing the power of steam 156 The Industrial Revolution: 1733-1878 158 The canal age 161 The mechanization of farming 162 Steam engines power machines 164 Jacques Vaucanson 166 Cast iron (part 2) 174 James Watt 180 The atmospheric steam engine 182 The French describe technology 183 Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier 189 Machine tools: The lathe 190 Systems of machine tools 192 Color and chemistry 194 The continuing search for fiber 195 The railroad system 206 US railroads 213 Eli Whitney 216 Ada Lovelace 237 The telegraph 242 The advent of electricity 246 Intellectual and technological property 250 The Crystal Palace 254 Perpetual motion (part 2): An obsession 266 The Electric Age: 1879-1946 278 The development of radio 281 The telephone 282 Louis Pasteur 294 Thomas Alva Edison 296 '"Bout as high as a building ought to go . . ." 298 Why is there no Classic steam engine? 101 Wind power 103 Francis Bacon and the scientific method 112 Leonardo da Vinci 118 Johann Gutenberg 119 Old and New World plants meet 128 Pendulum myths 144 Early clocks 146 Gunpowder and guns in East and West 147 Perpetual motion (part 1): An old dream 150 Recognizing the power of steam 156 The Industrial Revolution: 1733-1878 158 The canal age 161 The mechanization of farming 162 Steam engines power machines 164 Jacques Vaucanson 166 Cast iron (part 2) 174 James Watt 180 The atmospheric steam engine 182 The French describe technology 183 Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier 189 Machine tools: The lathe 190 Systems of machine tools 192 Color and chemistry 194 The continuing search for fiber 195 The railroad system 206 US railroads 213 Eli Whitney 216 Ada Lovelace 237 The telegraph 242 The advent of electricity 246 Intellectual and technological property 250 The Crystal Palace 254 Perpetual motion (part 2): An obsession 266 The Electric Age: 1879-1946 278 The development of radio 281 The telephone 282 Louis Pasteur 294 Thomas Alva Edison 296 '"Bout as high as a building ought to go . . ." 298 Why is there no Classic steam engine? 101 Wind power 103 Francis Bacon and the scientific method 112 Leonardo da Vinci 118 Johann Gutenberg 119 Old and New World plants meet 128 Pendulum myths 144 Early clocks 146 Gunpowder and guns in East and West 147 Perpetual motion (part 1): An old dream 150 Recognizing the power of steam 156 The Industrial Revolution: 1733-1878 158 The canal age 161 The mechanization of farming 162 Steam engines power machines 164 Jacques Vaucanson 166 Cast iron (part 2) 174 James Watt 180 The atmospheric steam engine 182 The French describe technology 183 Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier 189 Machine tools: The lathe 190 Systems of machine tools 192 Color and chemistry 194 The continuing search for fiber 195 The railroad system 206 US railroads 213 Eli Whitney 216 Ada Lovelace 237 The telegraph 242 The advent of electricity 246 Intellectual and technological property 250 The Crystal Palace 254 Perpetual motion (part 2): An obsession 266 The Electric Age: 1879-1946 278 The development of radio 281 The telephone 282 Louis Pasteur 294 Thomas Alva Edison 296 '"Bout as high as a building ought to go . . ." 298 Why is there no Classic steam engine? 101 Wind power 103 Francis Bacon and the scientific method 112 Leonardo da Vinci 118 Johann Gutenberg 119 Old and New World plants meet 128 Pendulum myths 144 Early clocks 146 Gunpowder and guns in East and West 147 Perpetual motion (part 1): An old dream 150 Recognizing the power of steam 156 The Industrial Revolution: 1733-1878 158 The canal age 161 The mechanization of farming 162 Steam engines power machines 164 Jacques Vaucanson 166 Cast iron (part 2) 174 James Watt 180 The atmospheric steam engine 182 The French describe technology 183 Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier 189 Machine tools: The lathe 190 Systems of machine tools 192 Color and chemistry 194 The continuing search for fiber 195 The railroad system 206 US railroads 213 Eli Whitney 216 Ada Lovelace 237 The telegraph 242 The advent of electricity 246 Intellectual and technological property 250 The Crystal Palace 254 Perpetual motion (part 2): An obsession 266 The Electric Age: 1879-1946 278 The development of radio 281 The telephone 282 Louis Pasteur 294 Thomas Alva Edison 296 '"Bout as high as a building ought to go . . ." 298 Alexander Graham Bell 300 The perfect machine: The turbine 304 Guglielmo Marconi 306 Looking into people (part 1) 309 George Washington Carver 312 The Model T 326 Flight and the Wrights 328 Steel for strength 330 Aluminum for lightness 331 Nitrogen: A matter of life and death 332 Robots, fantasy and fact 338 Elmer Sperry 340 John Logie Baird 342 Industrial research 344 Wernher von Braun 350 Alan Mathison Turing 352 Vannevar Bush 353 Magic bullets (part 1) 356 Computers: From analog to digital 362 Computers: From telephone relays to vacuum tubes 365 Antibiotics 367 The Electronic Age: 1947-1972 368 The Hale telescope at Mt Palomar 375 First-generation computers 376 The transistor 382 Jonas Salk and Albert Bruce Sabin 383 Grace Murray Hopper 388 Satellites into space 389 The beginning of programming 392 The space race 395 Looking into people (part 2) 400 The integrated circuit, or chip 405 Scientists and defense 407 The coming of future shock 409 The Information Age: 1973-1993 410 Time shifting 413 High and low technology 414 The laser 421 Composites 424 The post-industrial society 425 Perpetual motion (part 3): "It keeps on going . . ." 426 Nuclear power 427 Alternative energy sources 428 The space shuttle 429 Kary Mullis 433 Steven P. Jobs 435 Communicating with light 438 High-temperature superconductors 444 Massively parallel computers 446 Convergence of modes 450 Magic bullets (part 2) 452 Name Index 455 Subject Index 466
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CONTENTS
Notes on conventions and abbreviations v
The Stone Ages: 2,400,000-4000 BC vi
The best rocks 2
Fire: The second key tool 4
Stone technology of the Old Stone Age 9
The first navigators 11
The first ceramics 4
Stone technology of the Middle Stone Age and Neolithic 16
New materials: Tooth, bone, and horn 18
The first machines 20
Machines that go around 22
The Metal Ages: 4000 BC -1000 CE 24
Irrigation and the rise of civilization 27
Metals and early smelting 28
The invention of the wheel .30
Inventing and writing numbers .31
City life 32
Early sailing 35
Building with brick and stone 44
Inventing writing and the alphabet 49
Paddles and oars 51
Domes, beams, and columns 52
Arches 53
Cast iron (part 1) 55
Archimedes 56
Hero of Alexandria 61
Salt and the fall of civilizations 71
What caused the Agricultural Revolution? (part 1) 75
What caused the Agricultural Revolution? (part 2)
What caused the Agricultural Revolution? (part 3) 79
The first great explorers 83
How the Egyptians did NOT build the pyramids 84
How the Egyptians DID build the pyramids 85
The Age of Water and Wind: 1000-1732 86
Cathedrals 90
Early surgery 92
Waterpower 94
Al-Jazari 99
Why is there no Classic steam engine? 101
Wind power 103
Francis Bacon and the scientific method 112
Leonardo da Vinci 118
Johann Gutenberg 119
Old and New World plants meet 128
Pendulum myths 144
Early clocks 146
Gunpowder and guns in East and West 147
Perpetual motion (part 1): An old dream 150
Recognizing the power of steam 156
The Industrial Revolution: 1733-1878 158
The canal age 161
The mechanization of farming 162
Steam engines power machines 164
Jacques Vaucanson 166
Cast iron (part 2) 174
James Watt 180
The atmospheric steam engine 182
The French describe technology 183
Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier 189
Machine tools: The lathe 190
Systems of machine tools 192
Color and chemistry 194
The continuing search for fiber 195
The railroad system 206
US railroads 213
Eli Whitney 216
Ada Lovelace 237
The telegraph 242
The advent of electricity 246
Intellectual and technological property 250
The Crystal Palace 254
Perpetual motion (part 2): An obsession 266
The Electric Age: 1879-1946 278
The development of radio 281
The telephone 282
Louis Pasteur 294
Thomas Alva Edison 296
'"Bout as high as a building ought to go . . ." 298
Why is there no Classic steam engine? 101
Wind power 103
Francis Bacon and the scientific method 112
Leonardo da Vinci 118
Johann Gutenberg 119
Old and New World plants meet 128
Pendulum myths 144
Early clocks 146
Gunpowder and guns in East and West 147
Perpetual motion (part 1): An old dream 150
Recognizing the power of steam 156
The Industrial Revolution: 1733-1878 158
The canal age 161
The mechanization of farming 162
Steam engines power machines 164
Jacques Vaucanson 166
Cast iron (part 2) 174
James Watt 180
The atmospheric steam engine 182
The French describe technology 183
Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier 189
Machine tools: The lathe 190
Systems of machine tools 192
Color and chemistry 194
The continuing search for fiber 195
The railroad system 206
US railroads 213
Eli Whitney 216
Ada Lovelace 237
The telegraph 242
The advent of electricity 246
Intellectual and technological property 250
The Crystal Palace 254
Perpetual motion (part 2): An obsession 266
The Electric Age: 1879-1946 278
The development of radio 281
The telephone 282
Louis Pasteur 294
Thomas Alva Edison 296
'"Bout as high as a building ought to go . . ." 298
Why is there no Classic steam engine? 101
Wind power 103
Francis Bacon and the scientific method 112
Leonardo da Vinci 118
Johann Gutenberg 119
Old and New World plants meet 128
Pendulum myths 144
Early clocks 146
Gunpowder and guns in East and West 147
Perpetual motion (part 1): An old dream 150
Recognizing the power of steam 156
The Industrial Revolution: 1733-1878 158
The canal age 161
The mechanization of farming 162
Steam engines power machines 164
Jacques Vaucanson 166
Cast iron (part 2) 174
James Watt 180
The atmospheric steam engine 182
The French describe technology 183
Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier 189
Machine tools: The lathe 190
Systems of machine tools 192
Color and chemistry 194
The continuing search for fiber 195
The railroad system 206
US railroads 213
Eli Whitney 216
Ada Lovelace 237
The telegraph 242
The advent of electricity 246
Intellectual and technological property 250
The Crystal Palace 254
Perpetual motion (part 2): An obsession 266
The Electric Age: 1879-1946 278
The development of radio 281
The telephone 282
Louis Pasteur 294
Thomas Alva Edison 296
'"Bout as high as a building ought to go . . ." 298
Why is there no Classic steam engine? 101
Wind power 103
Francis Bacon and the scientific method 112
Leonardo da Vinci 118
Johann Gutenberg 119
Old and New World plants meet 128
Pendulum myths 144
Early clocks 146
Gunpowder and guns in East and West 147
Perpetual motion (part 1): An old dream 150
Recognizing the power of steam 156
The Industrial Revolution: 1733-1878 158
The canal age 161
The mechanization of farming 162
Steam engines power machines 164
Jacques Vaucanson 166
Cast iron (part 2) 174
James Watt 180
The atmospheric steam engine 182
The French describe technology 183
Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montgolfier 189
Machine tools: The lathe 190
Systems of machine tools 192
Color and chemistry 194
The continuing search for fiber 195
The railroad system 206
US railroads 213
Eli Whitney 216
Ada Lovelace 237
The telegraph 242
The advent of electricity 246
Intellectual and technological property 250
The Crystal Palace 254
Perpetual motion (part 2): An obsession 266
The Electric Age: 1879-1946 278
The development of radio 281
The telephone 282
Louis Pasteur 294
Thomas Alva Edison 296
'"Bout as high as a building ought to go . . ." 298
Alexander Graham Bell 300
The perfect machine: The turbine 304
Guglielmo Marconi 306
Looking into people (part 1) 309
George Washington Carver 312
The Model T 326
Flight and the Wrights 328
Steel for strength 330
Aluminum for lightness 331
Nitrogen: A matter of life and death 332
Robots, fantasy and fact 338
Elmer Sperry 340
John Logie Baird 342
Industrial research 344
Wernher von Braun 350
Alan Mathison Turing 352
Vannevar Bush 353
Magic bullets (part 1) 356
Computers: From analog to digital 362
Computers: From telephone relays to vacuum tubes 365
Antibiotics 367
The Electronic Age: 1947-1972 368
The Hale telescope at Mt Palomar 375
First-generation computers 376
The transistor 382
Jonas Salk and Albert Bruce Sabin 383
Grace Murray Hopper 388
Satellites into space 389
The beginning of programming 392
The space race 395
Looking into people (part 2) 400
The integrated circuit, or chip 405
Scientists and defense 407
The coming of future shock 409
The Information Age: 1973-1993 410
Time shifting 413
High and low technology 414
The laser 421
Composites 424
The post-industrial society 425
Perpetual motion (part 3): "It keeps on going . . ." 426
Nuclear power 427
Alternative energy sources 428
The space shuttle 429
Kary Mullis 433
Steven P. Jobs 435
Communicating with light 438
High-temperature superconductors 444
Massively parallel computers 446
Convergence of modes 450
Magic bullets (part 2) 452
Name Index 455
Subject Index 466

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