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2005

UC-Blackwelder Tomato Harvester
Society: ASABE Main Category: Agricultural & Biological Sub Category: Era: 1950-1959 DateCreated: 1949 Western Center for Agricultural Equipment Davis State: CA Zip: 95616 Country: USA Website: https://www.asabe.org/awards-landmarks/asabe-historic-landmarks/uc-blackwelder-tomato-harvester-45.aspx Creator: Hanna, Jack

In 1942, University of California, Davis (UCD) biologist, Jack Hanna recognized the need for breeding tomato varieties that ripen uniformly and withstand the rigors of mechanical harvesting. In 1949, UCD agricultural engineer Coby Lorenzen and Hanna began developing a mechanical tomato harvester. Parallel efforts by others, notably those started in 1957 by agricultural engineer Bill Stout and horticulturist Stan Ries of Michigan State University, eventually resulted in several different harvesting mechanisms. In the late 1950s, UCD agricultural engineer Steven J.

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2005
Image Credit: Image Caption: Era_date_from:
Alberto Santos-Dumont
Society: AIAA Main Category: Aerospace & Aviation Sub Category: Frontiers of Knowledge Era: DateCreated: Rua do Encanto, 22 - Centro, Petrópolis - RJ, 25685-081, Brazil Sao Paolo State: Zip: Country: Website: https://www.aiaa.org/SecondaryTwoColumn.aspx?id=15163 Creator:

Born 20 July 1873 in the state of Sao Paolo, Alberto Santos Dumont moved to Paris in 1891 but never forgot his birthplace. He soon began experimenting with flying, and designed his first balloon, the Brasil, in 1898. He later built and flew 11 dirigibles, including the prize-winning Number 6. He flew his first airplane, the 14 bis, on 23 October 1906, the first aircraft to take off and land without any external assistance. His many other contributions to aviation included his 1909 Demoiselle, the precursor to modern light airplanes.

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2005
Image Credit: Image Caption: Brazilian aviation pioneer Alberto Santos-Dumont with his No. 18 "floatplane", never completed Era_date_from:
Columbia Dry Cell Battery
Society: ACS Main Category: Chemical Sub Category: Era: 1890-1899 DateCreated: 1896 Energizer Holdings, Inc. corporate headquarters St. Louis State: MO Zip: Country: USA Website: https://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/education/whatischemistry/landmarks/drycellbattery.html Creator: Lawrence, Washington H.

Imagine a world without batteries. It would be a much different world, in which the automobile and the telephone would have developed differently and probably later, a world without many of the conveniences of modern life and without some of the necessities. The battery, ever smaller and more powerful, defines much of our modern comforts and advances. There were many scientific and technological advances on the way to those smaller and more powerful batteries.

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2005
Image Credit: Courtesy Duke University Image Caption: Columbia Batteries: The World's Standard Era_date_from:
First 735 kV AC Transmission System
Society: IEEE Main Category: Electric Sub Category: Era: 1960-1969 DateCreated: 1965 Hydro-Quebec Montréal State: Quebec Zip: Country: Canada Website: http://www.ieeeghn.org/wiki/index.php/Milestones:First_735_kV_AC_Transmission_System,_1965 Creator: Hydro-Quebec

Hydro-Quebec's 735,000 volt electric power transmission system was the first in the world to be designed, built and operated at an alternating-current voltage above 700 kV. This development extended the limits of long-distance transmission of electrical energy. On 29 November 1965 the first 735 kV line was inaugurated. Power was transmitted from the Manicouagan-Outardes hydro-electric generating complex to Montreal, a distance of 600 km.

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2005
Image Credit: Courtesy Wikicommons/abdallahh (cc-by-2.0) Image Caption: A pylon of the 735kV power transmission system. Era_date_from: 1965
Philadelphia City Hall
Society: ASCE Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Buildings Era: 1900-1909 DateCreated: 1901 1 Penn Square Philadelphia State: PA Zip: 19107 Country: USA Website: http://www.asce.org/Project/Philadelphia-City-Hall/ Creator: McArthur, John , Walter, Thomas

Philadelphia City Hall was the largest masonry load-bearing wall building in the world at the time of its completion in 1901, stood as the tallest occupied building in the United States until 1909, and still is the largest city hall in the United States. The building covers 14.26 acres, originally contained 634 rooms with over 1 million square feet of space, and with its tower and statue of William Penn rises a total of 548 feet above the ground. The construction of Philadelphia City Hall began in 1872 and was completed in 1901.

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2005
Image Credit: Courtesy Flickr/elPadawan (CC BY-SA 2.0) Image Caption: Philadelphia City Hall Era_date_from: 1901
Model T
Society: ASME Main Category: Mechanical, Road Sub Category: Road Transportation Era: 1900-1909 DateCreated: 1908-1927 The Henry Ford Museum
Dearborn State: MI Zip: Country: USA Website: https://www.asme.org/about-asme/who-we-are/engineering-history/landmarks/233-model-t Creator: Ford Motor Company, Wills, Childe

When Ford Motor Company introduced its new Model T on October 1, 1908, even an inveterate optimist like Henry Ford (1863-1947) could not predict the vast changes that his rather homely new vehicle would produce. What flowed from this series of bold innovations was more than an endless stream of Model Ts — it was the very foundation of the twentieth century itself. The assembly line became the century's characteristic production mode, eventually applied to everything from phonographs to hamburgers.

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2005
Image Credit: Courtesy Flickr/Don O'Brien (CC BY 2.0) Image Caption: Model T Era_date_from: 1908
Sweetwater Dam
Society: ASCE Main Category: Civil Sub Category: Dams Era: 1880-1889 DateCreated: 1888 Sweetwater River Chula Vista State: CA Zip: Country: USA Website: http://www.asce.org/Project/Sweetwater-Dam/ Creator: Brown, Frank , Schuyler, James

When completed in 1888 to a height of 90 feet, Sweetwater Dam was once the tallest masonry arch dam in the United States, and it led to many others of the same basic design. The original construction began in November 1886 under the direction of Frank E. Brown (civil engineer for Bear Valley Dam) with the rubble-masonry thin-arch design being 50 feet in height. Subsequently, the owner of the water system called upon civil engineer James D. Schuyler to continue and complete the project. Although the field of hydrology was very new and not fully understood at the time, Mr.

YearAdded:
2005
Image Credit: Courtesy Flickr/Phil Konstantin (CC BY 2.0) Image Caption: Sweetwater Dam Era_date_from: 1888
Eiffel Drop Test Machine and Wind Tunnel
Society: ASME Main Category: Mechanical Sub Category: Research and Development Era: 1900-1909 DateCreated: 1903, 1912 Auteuil Laboratory Paris State: Zip: 75016 Country: France Website: http://www.asme.org/about-asme/history/landmarks/topics-m-z/research-and-development/-237-eiffel-1903-drop-test-machine-and-1912-wind-t Creator: Eiffel, Gustave

Late in life, the renowned structural engineer Gustave Eiffel (1832-1923) embarked on aeronautical research. Reliable data and repeatable research methods were rare in the early 1900s, but Eiffel brought an engineer's discipline to the field. In the process, he produced the most accurate aeronautical data of the time, confirmed a long-held theory about fluid flow that had never been unequivocally proven, and established a laboratory that became a model for future practice.

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2005
Image Credit: Image Caption: Floor plan of Eiffel's 1912 laboratory at Auteuil, Paris, with two open-return wind tunnels Era_date_from: 1903, 1912
Society: IEEE Main Category: Electrical Sub Category: Nuclear and Plasma Sciences Era: 1960-1969 DateCreated: 1968 European Organization for Nuclear Research Geneva State: Meyrin Zip: 1217 Country: Switzerland Website: http://www.ieeeghn.org/wiki/index.php/Milestones:CERN_Experimental_Instrumentation,_1968 Creator: Charpak, Georges

The 1992 Nobel Prize in physics was awarded to Georges Charpak, France, for his invention and development of detectors in high energy physics. Since 1959 Charpak had worked at CERN, the European laboratory for particle physics situated in the canton of Geneva in Switzerland. Charpak invented the multi - wire proportional chamber at CERN. The pioneering work was published in 1968. Largely due to his work particle physicists have been able to focus their interest on very rare particle interactions, which often reveal the secrets of the inner parts of matter.

YearAdded:
2005
Image Credit: Image Caption: CERN Experimental Instrumentation Era_date_from: 1968
Society: ASME Main Category: Mechanical Sub Category: Manufacturing Era: 1930-1939 DateCreated: 1938-1948 Ciudad de la Paz 394 Buenos Aires State: Zip: 1426 Country: Argentina Website: http://www.asme.org/about-asme/history/landmarks/topics-m-z/manufacturing---2/-236-birome-ballpoint-pen-collection-%281938-1948%29, http://files.asme.org/asmeorg/Communities/History/Landmarks/10389.pdf Creator: Biro, Ladislao Jose
The ballpoint pen invented by Ladislao Jose Biro was originally patented in Hungary in 1938. The principle of the ballpoint pen was originally patented by John Loud in 1888 for a product to mark leather and in 1916 by Van Vechten Riesberg, but neither of these products were exploited commercially. As a journalist, Biro was inspired by the concept of quick-drying ink in a print shop.
YearAdded:
2005
Image Credit: Courtesy Wikipedia/(CC BY-SA 2.5) Image Caption: A 1945 Birome Ballpoint Pen advertisement in an Argentine magazine known as Leoplán Era_date_from: 1938
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Innovations

Great Western Railway

In the early 1830s, the merchants of Bristol, long dissatisfied with their communication with London, began to wonder if the new railroad technology might be a solution to their problem. The Bristol Chamber of Commerce, the Merchant Adventurers and other local industrial bodies formed a…

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The ballpoint pen invented by Ladislao Jose Biro was originally patented in Hungary in 1938. The principle of the ballpoint pen was originally patented by John Loud in 1888 for a product to mark leather and in 1916 by Van Vechten Riesberg, but neither of these products were exploited commercially… Read More

The 1992 Nobel Prize in physics was awarded to Georges Charpak, France, for his invention and development of detectors in high energy physics. Since 1959 Charpak had worked at CERN, the European laboratory for particle physics situated in the canton of Geneva in Switzerland. Charpak invented the…

Read More
Eiffel Drop Test Machine and Wind Tunnel

Late in life, the renowned structural engineer Gustave Eiffel (1832-1923) embarked on aeronautical research. Reliable data and repeatable research methods were rare in the early 1900s, but Eiffel brought an engineer's discipline to the field. In the process, he produced the most accurate…

Read More
Sweetwater Dam

When completed in 1888 to a height of 90 feet, Sweetwater Dam was once the tallest masonry arch dam in the United States, and it led to many others of the same basic design. The original construction began in November 1886 under the direction of Frank E. Brown (civil engineer for Bear Valley Dam…

Read More
Model T

When Ford Motor Company introduced its new Model T on October 1, 1908, even an inveterate optimist like Henry Ford (1863-1947) could not predict the vast changes that his rather homely new vehicle would produce. What flowed from this series of bold innovations was more than an endless stream of…

Read More
Philadelphia City Hall

Philadelphia City Hall was the largest masonry load-bearing wall building in the world at the time of its completion in 1901, stood as the tallest occupied building in the United States until 1909, and still is the largest city hall in the United States. The building covers 14.26 acres,…

Read More
First 735 kV AC Transmission System

Hydro-Quebec's 735,000 volt electric power transmission system was the first in the world to be designed, built and operated at an alternating-current voltage above 700 kV. This development extended the limits of long-distance transmission of electrical energy. On 29 November 1965 the first 735…

Read More
Columbia Dry Cell Battery

Imagine a world without batteries. It would be a much different world, in which the automobile and the telephone would have developed differently and probably later, a world without many of the conveniences of modern life and without some of the necessities. The battery, ever smaller and more…

Read More
Alberto Santos-Dumont

Born 20 July 1873 in the state of Sao Paolo, Alberto Santos Dumont moved to Paris in 1891 but never forgot his birthplace. He soon began experimenting with flying, and designed his first balloon, the Brasil, in 1898. He later built and flew 11 dirigibles, including the…

Read More
UC-Blackwelder Tomato Harvester

In 1942, University of California, Davis (UCD) biologist, Jack Hanna recognized the need for breeding tomato varieties that ripen uniformly and withstand the rigors of mechanical harvesting. In 1949, UCD agricultural engineer Coby Lorenzen and Hanna began developing a mechanical tomato…

Read More

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