Dynamite.
The plimsoll line was invented in the 19th centary by a british man named Samuel plimsoll
Nobody, the have simply always existed since moments after the Big Bang. Murray Gel-Man named them.
The hygrometer was invented in the year 1670 by a man named Francesco Folli. Leonardo da Vinci was said to have built the first crude hygrometer in the 1400's.
He did NOT invent the fountain pen he patented it. The first fountain pen was invented by a french-man named M.Bion. Lewis Waterman just improved it.
a man named Joseph mclean
Well, it is the Nobel Peace Prize. It was invented by a man named Alfred Nobel, who, ironically, created dynamite.
The man who invented the Nobel Prize was Alfred Bernhard Nobel was born in Stockholm, Sweden on 21 October 1833. The man who invented the Nobel Prize was Alfred Bernhard Nobel was born in Stockholm, Sweden on 21 October 1833.
In 1968 a man named yasunari won the prize for literature.
Alfred Nobel financed the Nobel Prizes after seeing the destruction caused by his invention, dynamite.
nobel peace prize
Its a Failure of the Nobel prize comitte. Because Nobel is western world honour. How they give it to a man who defeat them?
The explosive dynamite was invented in 1866 (patented in 1867) by Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel. The word is of Greek origin and yes, Alfred Nobel is the same man who invented the Nobel Peace Prize. He started the award in response to realizing that he would most likely only be remembered for the destruction of, and not bettering of humanity.
The character of the doctor in "The Old Man and the Sea" is not specifically mentioned, and the book does not refer to any doctor receiving a Nobel Prize in 1954. The Nobel Prize in Literature for 1954 was awarded to Ernest Hemingway, the author of the book.
A man actually won the 11th Nobel Prize in Literature. It was given to Maurice Maeterlinck, a Belgian author, in 1911. Two years previous, it was given to a woman named Selma Lagerlof, a Swedish children's book writer.
Ernest Rutherford won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1908 for his investigations into the disintegration of elements, and the chemistry of radioactive substances.
There hasn't yet been a female Canadian winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, as of 2014. The only Canadian to win the Nobel Peace Prize is Lester B. Pearson, in 1957, a man.
Harold Pinter