The scientist who discovered more than 200 uses for the peanut was George Washington Carver.
George Washington Carver. See the related link for more information.
I am not sure it was 200, it could have been more or less, but George Washington Carver in pressing his crop rotation suggested many, many, many ways of using the peanut.
Yes, he did, but he didn't make peanut butter.
Hundreds of uses for the peanut were described by George Washington Carver. It's worth looking into his writings.
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That great peanut scientist was named George Washington Carver.
George Washington Carver...a Black Man from the USA
Yes, George Washington Carver invented many uses for the peanut. He once served an entire school a meal made totally out of peanuts! He also invented uses for the bean and the sweet potato.
Carver developed methods for making many useful substances out of peanuts, such as cosmetics, paints, and nitroglycerin. He didn't really "invent" the substances so much as show that they could be economically made from peanut plants.
George Washington Carver invented many uses for the peanut.
He found hundreds of different uses for the peanut such as cosmetics, dyes, paints, plastics, gasoline and nitroglycerin.
he made peanut butter and developed 325 differnt uses for nuts and vegetables such as sweet potatos
"Agricultural chemist, George Washington Carver discovered three hundred uses for peanuts and hundreds more uses for soybeans, pecans and sweet potatoes. He start popularizing uses for peanut products including peanut butter, paper, ink, and oils beginning in 1880."