What the past did for us : a brief history of ancient inventions /
Brief history of ancient inventions
Adam Hart-Davis.
- London : BBC Books, 2004.
- 224 pages, 16 pages of plates : illustrations (some color), maps ; 25 cm.
Includes Index
" Published to accompany the television series ("What the past did for Us"), first broadcast on BBC2 in 2005"
The Britons-- The Mesopotamians-- The Egyptians-- The Indians-- The Chinese-- The Greeks-- The Romans-- The Arabs-- The Mesoamericans.
A journey to the ancient world reveals an astonishing array of innovations that occurred long before many of us would ever have thought they had. The Greeks were responsible for building the first known computer, around 100 B.C. The Romans--famous for their road building--also gave us double glazing and central heating. All in all we owe a huge debt to the ancients--from the Chinese who invented paper money and the wheelbarrow, to the early Britons who developed the first housing estate at Skara Brae, home to the world's oldest known lavatories.
9780563522072 0563522070
Historia de los inventos Inventos --Historia Tecnología --Historia