Submitted by emsot t3_1098uax in askscience
UnarmedSnail t1_j44xnwd wrote
Reply to comment by BaldBear_13 in Why are coastlines crinkly near the poles but smooth in the tropics? by emsot
There's a fair amount of randomness to it as well. You need all these important pieces, but you need them to come together in the right way, the right time, and in the right place. The ancient Greeks had all they needed to jumpstart the industrial revolution 3,000 years ago, but the pieces were locked away as religious displays and secret knowledge in mystery cults.
BaldBear_13 t1_j44xut2 wrote
do you have more detail on what the pieces were? A link is fine, or a name of a book or author.
UnarmedSnail t1_j4527gk wrote
They had chemical batteries that would be connected to statues of Zeus that would shock when touched. They had primitive steam engines that would spin up when boiling water was heated inside them. They had the archimedes screw. Complex machines for milling,stamping, grinding. If someone had known of all these pieces and thought to combine these technologies to actually do work then you have an industrial revolution.
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