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  • A Revolution in History What would your world be like without wheels?

  • Think of all the things you do every day that use a wheel or wheels.

  • Wheels help you get to many places where you want to go.

  • But did you know that we depend on wheels for much more than just

  • transportation?

  • We need wheels for the presses that print our magazinesand books.

  • We need them for the washers and driers that clean our clothes, the mills that make flour)

  • for our bread.

  • And of course, we need them to have fun on skateboards and roller coasters.

  • The oldest wheels that we know about are potter's wheels.

  • A potter's wheel looks like a small, round table without legs.

  • To make a pot, a piece of clay is placed on the Center of the wheel.

  • The potter rotates the wheel while the clay is shaped.

  • Potter's wheels make it easier and faster to shape the round objects that you use every

  • day, such as bowls, plates, and vases.

  • Before the invention of the wheel, it was difficult to transport heavy things, such

  • as building stones.

  • These stones had to be hauled on a platform.

  • The platform was rolled forward on top of logs.

  • It was hard work, and it took a long time.

  • However, about 5,000 years ago, someone living in Sumer, which is the place we now call southern

  • Irag, had a great idea.

  • What if pegs were used to hold the rolling logs in place?

  • And what if wooden disks were fastened to the end of each log to make them stronger?

  • That way, animals such as oxen could easily pull a heavy load on the new wheeled cart.

  • Today, we call this a wheel and axle system, and it works really well.

  • Early wheels were made out of solid disks of wood.

  • They were heavy and didn't turn fast.

  • Then the Egyptians found a solution to this problem by making ring-shaped wheels, which

  • were lighter and turned faster.

  • They discovered that adding metal to the rim made the wheel more durable and gave it better

  • traction.

  • They attached straight rods called spokes to the center of the wheel to make it strong.

  • These new wheels were used in light horse-drawn carts called chariots.

  • Chariots were like the first cars.

  • People used them to get around but they also became popular for racing.

  • The wheel didn't just change the way people got from place to place.

  • In Syria and Asia, people started using the running water of a river to turn large water

  • wheels.

  • When the wheel turned it created the power to Operate a simple machine called a mill.

  • A water mill could grind wheat into flour much faster than a person could.

  • This invention means that millions of loaves of bread are made all around the world every

  • single day!

  • Lots of machines of every size and shape, from watches to printing presses, wouldn't

  • work without wheels.

  • Many machines depend on small wheels that fit together, called gears.

  • This is great because when one wheel turns, the next wheel turns.

  • The energy is transferred from one gear to another.

  • That is the same mechanical movement that keeps a watch ticking, 1 a car engine running,

  • a bicycle's wheels turning, and a press printing.

  • Even today, the wheel is still inspiring new technology.

  • Did you know that there's an electric unicycle and an automatic suitcase that will move by

  • itself?

  • There's even a new metal wheel that is designed especially for vehicles that are going to

  • explore the surface of the planet Mars.

  • Wheels will always be a central part of life, and the need for them is going to grow as

  • long as humans think, invent, and change.

A Revolution in History What would your world be like without wheels?

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