Waterwheel related
Steam related
Geography's impact
Factories + Examples of new tech
Steam engine impact
100

Did waterwheels come before or after Steam engines?

(what does it mean to be) Before steam engines.

100

Steam engines could be used for making what type of energy?

(What is) rotational energy.

100

How was access to coal useful to industrialization?

(how can) coal was (or be) useful because of its high burning temperature leading to the prospect of steam engines to be profitable. 

100

This is the definition of a factory.

(What is) a building that used machines to produce goods

100

Give 2 examples in which Steam engines were used for transportation

(What are) Trains and Steam boats

200

How does coal power a steam engine?

(What is it called when) Burning coal releases lots of heat, which is used to boil water into steam, which is then pressurized and used to power a piston.

200

A country that wanted to industrialize required access, either by trade or within their own territory, to these goods and resources

(What is) steel, coal, timber, and waterways

200

How does specifically the burning of coal later affect the global scape even in modern day?

(How does) the burning of coal, a fossil fuel, release(s) CO2 as a byproduct and greenhouse gas which later due to large scale power production lead to considerable temperature increase on a global stage

300

Please name 2 ways in which waterways were important to the development of Industrialisation

1.(How do waterways provide) More access to moving produced goods and input goods to and from factories (trade) 

2. (How do waterways provide) Power for waterwheels (in the early stages of industrialization)

300

How much did the factories of the industrial revolution increase production in Great Britain through the start of 1750 to the end of 1900?

50x

or

5000%

400

A waterwheel can be defined as...

(What is) a wheel with buckets that uses a stream's energy and harnesses it's energy and transforms it into rotational energy to power mechanisms

400

What was the main reason that Steam engines were superior to waterwheels for factories?

(how do) steam engines allow for the movement of factories away from the river banks and into the countryside allowing for the development of urban areas not localized around rivers.

400

Name 2 geographic reasons why Great Britain was the first nation to industrialize?

(why was) Coal (was) close to the surface and there was a surplus of natural waterways allowing for a large scale production of both first waterwheels and then later steam engines.
400

Originally developed for firearms, this method of manufacturing items allowed for easier repair of goods and machinery

(What are) standardized parts

500

How did a waterwheel make the lives of people easier?

(What) (It) allowed people to hook up machines to a different power source than humans or animals, allowing for a faster production of new goods.

500

This is one significant continuity that can be seen with the way humanity viewed the natural world around it during this time period.

(What does it mean that) the industrializing nations viewed nature as an inexhaustible resource and a tool by which they could get what they wanted?

500

A Factory uses many different mechanisms. Please name at least 2 and define them.

Spinning Jenny-uses strings or yarn to weave fabrics far more efficiently than a human.

Cotton gin-separates cotton and seeds from the pod

Power source-Waterwheels or Steam Engines used to spin a axel that powers these simple machines

500

How were steam engines useful for warfare?

1)(how can) Steam engines could be placed on boats to then be able to sail upriver intruding on the back of forts that had been built with this prospect out of mind.

2)(how can) Steam engines could be placed on boats to then be able to outcompete sailboats and lead to a generally superior naval force

M
e
n
u