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The
Mass Production of Automobiles
While
Henry Ford generally gets credit for inventing the assembly
line and mass-producing automobiles, it was actually fellow
auto-maker Ransom E. Olds- creator of the Oldsmobile- who
did it first, in 1901. The idea allowed Olds to boost production
from 425 cars in 1901 to 2500 in 1902. Henry Ford, however,
does deserve credit for adding conveyor belts to the assembly
line, cutting production time of a Model T from 36 hours to
90 minutes. By 1927, more than 18 million Ford cars had rolled
off the assembly line.
Old's
and Ford's feats of engineering led to a boom in American
industry. They also led us down the road to our current ecological
emergency. After years of heated debate over whether humans
were to blame for global warming, the evidence is now incontrovertible.
The United States currently dumps about 1.7 billion tons of
carbon dioxide into the atmosphere each year. About one fifth
of that comes from private cars, pick-ups, minivans and SUV's.
But
the same ingenuity that got us here could also help us avoid
a global warming catastrophe. The Ford Motor Company is one
of several auto- makers that already offer fuel-efficient
vehicles. Ford's Th!nk line of vehicles, like Ford's assembly
lines, might be one of the great moments in global climate
change in the future.
Learn more about TH!NK CARS here.
Click
on a thumbnail picture to learn about another
great moment in global climate change:
      

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