History, asked by Shadowolf, 11 months ago

Write a WHOLE big essay about Alexander Parks please delete the answers of nonsense

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Answered by saurez
3

Answer:

Explanation:

The child of a producer of metal locks, Parkes was apprenticed to Messenger and Sons, metal organizers of Birmingham, before going to work for George and Henry Elkington, who protected the electroplating process.Parkes was placed accountable for the throwing division, and his consideration before long started to concentrate on electroplating. Parkes took out his first patent (No. 8905) in 1841 on a procedure for electroplating fragile masterpieces. His improved technique for electroplating fine and delicate items, for example, blossoms, was allowed a patent in 1843. The procedure included electroplating an item recently plunged in an answer of phosphorus contained in bisulphide of carbon, and afterward in nitrate of silver. A bug catching network's, silver-plated by this strategy, was introduced to Prince Albert when he visited the Elkington works in 1844.In 1846. he licensed the virus fix process for vulcanizing elastic, called by Thomas Hancock "one of the most significant and exceptional revelations of the age".  He spearheaded the expansion of little amounts of phosphorus to metals and compounds, and created phosphor-bronze (patent 12325 of 1848, taken out together with his sibling Henry Parkes).  In 1850, he created and protected the Parkes procedure for monetarily desilvering lead, likewise licensing refinements to the procedure in 1851 and 1852.  In 1856, he protected Parkesine – the primary thermoplastic – a celluloid dependent on nitrocellulose treated with an assortment of solvents. This material, displayed at the 1862 London International Exhibition, foreseen a significant number of the advanced tasteful and utility employments of plastics.  In 1866, he set up The Parkesine Company at Hackney Wick, London, for mass minimal effort creation. It was not industrially fruitful, in any case, for Parkesine was costly to create, inclined to breaking and exceptionally combustible. The business shut in 1868.  Parkes' material was grown later in improved structure as Xylonite by his partner Daniel Spill, who brought a patent encroachment claim – eventually ineffective – against John Wesley Hyatt, designer of celluloid in the US. In 1870, nonetheless, the appointed authority decided that Parkes was the genuine creator, attributable to his unique tests.

Answered by JayaramJR07
4

Answer:

  • George Alexander Parks (May 29, 1883 – May 11, 1984) was an American engineer who worked in Alaska Territory for most of his career. Following an unexpected nomination from President Calvin Coolidge, he became the territory's first resident governor. As governor, he was the first person to serve two complete four-year terms and the first chief executive to travel extensively by air
  • Parks was born to James and Mary Leach (Ferguson) Parks on May 29, 1883 in Denver, Colorado. He was educated in public schools before graduating from the Colorado School of Mines in 1906. After graduation, he worked as a mining engineer in Canada, Mexico, and the Western United States before arriving in Alaska in 1907 as part of an engineering team tasked with making evaluations for a group of investors.
  • In 1908, Parks worked for the United States Land Office in Denver as a mineral examiner for two months before taking a similar position in Alaska. Following the American entry into World War I, he joined the Army Corps of Engineers. Rising to the rank of captain by the war's end, he returned to the Land office after his military service.
  • In 1920, Parks was appointed Chief of the United States Land Office in Juneau. Four years later he was in Anchorage working as Assistant Supervisor of Surveys of Public Lands for Alaska. During his time with the land office, he traveled extensively throughout the territory, gaining an intimate knowledge of the geography and becoming acquainted with both the white and indigenous populations of Alaska
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