Australia -- birthplace of boomerangs,
sport utility vehicles and 'black box' flight recorders
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By Paul Niemann
[SEPT. 18,
2003]
Welcome to Australia, the
land "down under." Australia is the largest island in the world and
is home to aborigines, Tasmanian devils, koala bears, kangaroos and
the Sydney Opera House. It's also home to some of the world's most
unique and valuable inventions.
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Australia served as a penal colony for
England in the 1800s. In 1894, Australia became the first country to
allow women to vote. Called "suffrage," it sounds bad, but it's
really a good thing. Australia is also the only country to have
participated in every modern Olympics.
Our family has been particularly
interested in Australia ever since my brother spent two seasons
playing pro baseball there in the late 1980s. Many Americans know
very little about Australia, and this story focuses on three
well-known inventions that originated on this island continent:
boomerangs, sport utility vehicles and the "black box" flight
recorders used in airplanes.
1. The
boomerang
Boomerangs were likely invented for
sport by Australian aborigines a couple thousand years ago. While
it's generally believed that boomerangs were used for hunting, it
would be nearly impossible to use a boomerang to kill any kind of
animal large enough to be worth eating. No one knows exactly what
makes a boomerang fly the way it does. The name boomerang comes from
a tribe in New South Wales.
2. The
sport utility vehicle
The story of the utility vehicle, or
Ute for short, began in 1932 when a farmer's wife asked the Ford
Motor Company in Geelong, Victoria, why they couldn't make a vehicle
that could haul the family to church on Sunday and the pigs to
market on Monday. The company's designer, 22-year-old Lewis Brandt,
designed a vehicle that combined a truck bed with the cab of a car.
It was commercialized two years later.
3. The
black box
Dr. David Warren was investigating a
series of airplane crashes for the Aeronautical Research
Laboratories in Melbourne in 1953 when he invented the "black box"
flight data recorder. He based his work on the belief that a flight
crew might know what went wrong when a plane crashes and that their
conversations would provide some clues. The nearly indestructible
device, which was originally painted bright red or orange in order
to make it easier to locate after a crash, was in production by
1957.
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Like many popular inventions, the black
box was at first deemed unnecessary -- by the Australian government,
no less. Fortunately, a British company decided to commercialize it,
and in 1960 Australia became the first country to make flight
recorders mandatory in aircraft, just three years after it first hit
the market. Today, nearly every large aircraft in the world has a
black box.
Other notable inventions that come from
the land down under include:
- Private ballot box, invented in
Victoria in 1856
- Prepaid postage that is used in
nearly every country today, invented by the postmaster general of
New South Wales in 1838
- Australian football, better known
as rugby, invented in 1858
- Electric drill, invented in
Melbourne in 1889
- Speedo swimsuit, invented as
"racing swimwear" in 1927, soon followed by the world's first
swimsuit competition
- Inflatable airplane escape slide,
developed by a Qantas Airlines employee in 1965
- Cochlear ear implant, invented by
a professor at the University of Melbourne in 1979
G'day, mate!
[Paul
Niemann]
Paul Niemann is a contributing author
to Inventors' Digest magazine, and he also runs
MarketLaunchers.com,
building websites for inventors. He can be reached at
niemann7@aol.com.
Copyright Paul Niemann 2003
Last week's
column in LDN:
"What do celebrities know about
inventing that the rest of us don't?"
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