Wednesday 13 June 2012

Some inventions from South Africa...

If you ever need any other reason to be proudly South African, here are a few more...


1. Cat Scan
The computed axial tomography scan, or CAT scan as its better known, was developed at Tufts University in the UK by South African physicist Allan Cormack and Godfrey Hounsfield of EMI Laboratories. Their achievement secured them the1979 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.



2. Oil from coal
Sasol is the world's first - and largest - oil-from-coal refinery. The history of Sasol began in 1927, it was realised then that, because South Africa did not have crude oil reserves, the country's balance of payments had to be protected against increasing crude oil imports. Sasol has developed world-leading technology for the conversion of low-grade coal into value-added synfuels and chemicals.


3. Heart Transplant
The world's first heart transplant was performed by Dr Chris Barnard in Cape Town on 3 December 1967.  In November 1967, Dr Schrire called Barnard and told him that there was a suitable patient for a heart transplant. Louis Washkansky was suffering from heart failure and Dr Barnard was prepared to take the chance. The rest is history.

4. Speed gun
The South African-made speed gun, developed by Somerset West inventor Henri Johnson, was formally launched at The Oval in England during the 1999 Cricket World Cup.


5. Kreepy Krauley
The swimming pool vacuum cleaner was invented by Ferdinand Chauvier, a hydraulics engineer who came to South Africa from the Belgian Congo in 1951.


6. APS Therapy
Gervan Lubbe, had always had a keen interest in medicine, but never thought he was clever enough to be a doctor. So in his spare time he studied human anatomy and physiology until he thought he knew enough about the causes of arthritic pain. Then he set out inventing a device that would alleviate the problem.
After building the first prototypes and obtaining approval from the health department and the Food and Drug Administration in the United States, Lubbe formed the company Tech Pulse in 1993 to produce, market and distribute the Action Potential Stimulation device.



7. Pratley putty
Pratley's famous glue is the only South African invention that has been to the moon. In 1969 the putty was used to hold bits of the Apollo XI mission's Eagle landing craft together.



8. Dolosse

Dolosse are large, unusually shaped concrete blocks weighing up to 20 tons. The structures are designed to break up wave action and protect harbour walls and coastal installations. Designed by Eric Merrifield and first installed in East London harbour, they are now used all over the world.







We all have two choices; We can make a living or we can design a life. 

Jim Rohn








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