Chronology

Full chronology version

1950

The Kenyan Tea Board is established as tea planting takes off in East Africa.

1950

Coffee is planted in New Guinea.

Tobacco-weighing at Liverpool docks. Photograph from MDHB/original prints/box 1.

1950

Morton Levin makes an unambiguous link between smoking and lung cancer.

Black refugees evicted from sharecropping, now on the roadside. Parkin, Arkansas.

1950 - 1959

Harvesting machinery replaces sharecroppers on American farms.

1950

McCarthyism emerges in America as an intense hatred of communism.

1950 - 1953

The Korean War ends in a stalemate as America, Australia and other forces face China and North Korea. The country is divided at the 38th parallel.

1950

Jacques Cousteau founds the French Oceanographic Campaign.

1950

In a telegram to Shtykov, (the Soviet Ambassador to North Korea) Stalin writes in regard to North Korea's planned invasion of the South: "tell him (Kim II Sung) that I am ready to help him in this matter".

1951

J. D. Salinger writes The Catcher in the Rye.

Marlon Brando.

1951

Marlon Brando popularises the T-shirt after wearing one in A Streetcar Named Desire.

19510614

Remington Rand Company launch the UNIVAC computer. The first machine is purchased for the US Census Bureau.

1951

The Nature Conservancy is formed.

1951

Rachel Carson writes The Sea Around Us.

1951

Foundation of the European Coal and Steel Community.

Zinn pushing button to close down his early Chicago Pile 3 reactor.

1951

The first nuclear reactor to produce electricity (albeit a small amount) is developed in Idaho by a team led by Walter Zinn. The Experimental Breeder Reactor (EBR-1) was started in December 1951 and was experimented with until its decommission in 1964.

1951

Kellogg's introduces Frosted Corn Flakes or Frosties.

1952 - 1959

The Mau Mau rebellion in Kenya is brutally repressed by the British.

Nelson's Column during the Great Smog of 1952.

1952

Four thousand people die in London as a result of smog.

1953

Premier of Samuel Beckett's play Waiting for Godot in Paris.

1953

Ian Fleming publishes his first James Bond story.

1953

Gilbert N. Plass presents a paper on global warming at the American Geophysical Union.

1953

Francis Crick and James Watson discover the structure of the DNA molecule.

1953

The Opium Protocol is agreed between nations limiting the growth of opum to Bulgaria, Greece, India, Iran Turkey, USSR and Yugoslavia and strictly for medical purposes.

1953

Mount Everest is climbed for the first time by Edmund Hilary and Tensing Norgay.

President Eisenhower signs H.R. 9757, an act "to amend the Atomic Energy Act of 1946." The signing was witnessed in his office by various senators, congressmen and members of the Atomic Energy Commission, August 30, 1954. Among the notable people include

1953

President Eisenhower proposed his "Atoms for Peace" programme, which instigated efforts to produce civil nuclear energy development in the USA.

1954

R. J. Reynolds introduces Winston filter tips.

1954

Philip Morris acquires Benson & Hedges.

1954

The Marlboro cowboy is introduced in ads.

1954

Eva Cooper files the first tobacco lawsuit against R. J. Reynolds for her husband's death from lung cancer.

1954

The US provides support to many sympathetic warlords in the approach to the Vietnam War and inadvertantly fuels a boom in heroin production in the Golden Triangle.

1954 - 1962

The Algerian War of Independence. Algeria wins a bitter 9 year struggle for independence against France.

A red Regency TR-1 transistor radio.

19541018

Texas Instruments introduces the first commercially available transistor radio, the Regency TR1, in the USA.

1954

The modern solar cell is developed at Bell laboratories, using silver.

1955

US Congress passes Air Pollution Control Act.

1955

Lindt & Sprungli introduce Lindor chocolates.

1955

Around the time that Disneyland first opens, T-shirts start to appear with images and logos.

1955

James Dean popularises the wearing of jeans in A Rebel Without a Cause.

1955

American inventors Malcolm McLean and Keith Tantlinger invent the modern transport container that can be loaded on trucks and ships and greatly reduced the amount of wood used in packaging.

1955 - 1975

The Vietnam War. American attempts to support the South Vietnamese forces fail as the North Vietnamese (supported by China and Russia) win a war of attrition.

1955

Disneyland opens in California.

1956

The world's first commercial nuclear electric power plant is opened at Sellafield in UK.

1956

The first fiber-optic semi-flexible gastroscope is patented by Basil Hirshowitz, C. Wilbur Peters and Lawrence E Curtiss.

1956

Sudan declares independence.

1956

Morocco and Tunisia gain independence from France.

Hungarian-Soviet friendship memorial at Memento Park in Budapest. By Hungarian sculptor Zsigmond Kisfaludi, 1956.

1956

Hungarian Revolution. Hungary's attempts at independence from the Soviet Bloc are suppressed.

1956

Cable ship Monarch completes laying the first Transatlantic telephone cable.

1956

The Suez Crisis. Britain and France are humiliated as Egypt takes control of the Suez Canal.

1956

The Hovercraft is invented.

1956

UK Parliament passes the Clean Air Act.

Oil is loaded from a truck to the railhead. Soon, as this method became unfeasible, pipelines were installed to transfer the huge quantities of oil.

1956

Geologist M. King Hubbert announced that US oil reserves would reach their peak by the early 1970's, then steadily decline.

Sputnik I exhibit at the National Museum of the United States Air Force.

1957

Sputnik I and Sputnik II are launched by the Russians.

1957

The High Fructose Corn Syrup production process is invented by Marshall and Kooi.

1957

The last surviving opium den in New York is closed down.

1957

Ghana declares independence from Britain.

1957

The Treaty of Rome establishes the European Economic Community, with France and Germany as the dominant members.

Statue of Dedan Kimathi, the rebel leader. Nairobi, Kenya.

1957

The Gold Coast, Ghana, and Malaya declare independence from Britain.

1957

The International Atomic Energy Agency is set up with the aim of promoting the use of nuclear energy in peaceful and productive ways.

1958

Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe publishes Things Fall Apart written in the English language.

1958

The first integrated circuit, or silicon chip is produced by Jack Kilby and Robert Noyce.

1958

France withdraws from NATO.

Small-sized badge, displaying the logo of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.

1958

Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament is founded in UK.

A Massey-Ferguson 35X. These were produced in around 1960.

1958

Massey-Harris merged with the Ferguson company in 1953 and now become Massey Ferguson, producing electronic and agricultural goods.

1958

Kellogg's introduces Rice Cocoa Crispies.

First Pizza Hut building at Wichita State University Campus, Kansas.

1958

Frank and Dan Carney found Pizza Hut in Wichita, Kansas, using a flatbread base.

A photograph taken during the construction of Shippingport Atomic Power Station.

1958

Shippingport Nuclear Power Station, the first full-scale commercial electric generating station to use nuclear power, begins operating at full capacity.

1959

Frank Lloyd Wright's New York Guggenheim Museum building is completed.

USSR stamp dedicated to 20th anniversary of Cuban revolution.

1959

Cuba falls to a communist revolution led by Fidel Castro.

1959

Alaska and Hawaii are added to the US.

1959

Yuri Gagarin becomes the first man in space.

19590801

Introduction of the Mini - initially under the Austin Seven or Morris Mini-Minor names. Designed by Alexander Issigonis (1906-1988) it becomes the best-selling British car of all time.

Theodore Maiman holding his invention of the world's first laser.

1960

The laser is created by Theodore Harold Maiman.

1960

Guylian chocolates is founded.

1960 - 1969

Indian food becomes increasingly popular around the world, increasing the use of spices.

Cotton plant.

1960

Over 75% of all clothing and fabrics sold in the US are made of cotton.

Example of slash and burn farming.

1960 - 1969

Slash and burn agriculture starts to destroy the Amazon Rainforest.

The national flag of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

1960

The Belgian Congo gains independence and becomes the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

1960

Cameroon declares independence.

1960

Togo gains independence.

Harold Macmillan in Ghana, 1960.

1960

British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan makes his Winds of Change speech, predicting a wave of decolonisation in Africa.

1960

Nigeria declares independence from Britain.

1960

Foundation of OPEC (Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries) in Baghdad. The founding members were Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. Later countries to join were Qatar, Indonesia, Libya, United Arab Emirates, Algeria, Nigeria, Ecuador, Angola and Gabon.

Wreckage of Francis Gary Powers' U-2 plane on display at Central Armed Forces Museum in Moscow.

19600501

An American U-2 spy plane, piloted by Francis Gary Powers, is shot down during a surveillance mission in Russian airspace.

19601219

Cuba openly aligns itself with Soviet foreign policy and claims solidarity with the Sino-Soviet bloc, issuing a joint communiqué with the USSR.

1961

V. S. Naipaul receives international acclaim for his novel A House for Mr Biswas set in Trinidad.

1961

Fidel Castro nationalises Cuba's sugar industry.

The boundaries of East and West Berlin in 1961, shortly before the building of the Berlin Wall.

1961

The Berlin Wall is erected.

Portuguese troops heading for Angola, during World War I.

1961

The Colonial War in Angola calls for independence from Portugal.

1961

South Africa is declared a republic and withdraws from the Commonwealth.

1961 - 1963

John F. Kennedy serves as US President.

1961

The World Wildlife Fund is founded in Switzerland.

1961

Sierra Leone declares independence from the UK.

1961

India uses military force to seize Goa and other Portuguese possessions in India.

1961

The Antarctic Treaty is signed.

1961

International Clean Air Congress is held in London.

196104

President John F. Kennedy secretly mounts the Bay of Pigs Invasion in Cuba, an attempt to overthrow Fidel Castro.

19610212

In a speech to the Nation, Castro announces the leadership's faith in Marxism-Leninism, and declares that Cuba will become a communist state.

1961

World cereal production (in millions of metric tons) reaches 205 for maize; 285 for rice; and 222 for wheat.

1961

The Chorleywood Bread Process is developed by the British Baking Research association and enables bakers to make use of lower-protein wheat types in producing bread. It is now used for 80% of British bread production and in India and Australasia.

The Beatles.

1962 - 1970

The Beatles are active.

British Army file photo of T. E. Lawrence.

1962

The life of T. E. Lawrence is depicted in the movie Lawrence of Arabia starring Peter O'Toole.

1962

An International Coffee Agreement is brokered by the UN, fixing prices and production.

1962

Burma bans opium.

1962

Rwanda and Burundi become independent states.

1962

Russia sends nuclear missiles to Cuba, prompting the Cuban Missile Crisis. Genuine threats of nuclear war are averted when Russia withdraws the missiles.

Statue of Nelson Mandela on Parliament Square, Westminster.

1962

Nelson Mandela is arrested for his role in the political activities of the African National Congress.

Stamp celebrating Jamaica's independence of 1962.

1962

Jamaica declares independence from the UK.

1962

Trinidad and Tobago declare independence from Britain.

1962

Uganda gains independence from Britain.

Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring. Official photo as FWS employee. c.1940.

1962

Rachel Carson publishes Silent Spring, decrying the use of chemical pesticides.

An aerial view showing the medium range ballistic missile field launch site number two at Sagua la Grande. October 17, 1962.

19621022

President Kennedy makes public the presence of Soviet missiles in Cuba and warns that, if any missiles are fired upon the United States, he would respond against the Soviet Union.

19621028

Khrushchev announces that he has ordered the removal of the Soviet missiles in Cuba.

1962

Creation of Ranks Hovis MacDougall, which owns the Hovis, Mothers' Pride and Nimble brands.

1962

The world's longest pipeline, the Druzhba, begins operation. The pipeline sources oil from the West Siberian oil fields in Russia and has continued to be extended and developed into new areas across Europe.

1963

The computer mouse is invented by Douglas Engelbart.

1963

President Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas, Texas.

1963

Kenya declares independence from Britain.

1963

Zanzibar declares independence from Britain.

1963

Singapore declares independence from Britain.

1963

US Congress passes Clean Air Act.

The Defence of Rorke's Drift, by Alphonse de Neuville (1882) .

1964

The movie Zulu is released depicting a battle from the Anglo-Zulu war that took place in 1879.

1964

Kenyan writer Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o publishes the novel Weep Not, Child which centres on the Mau Mau uprising.

1964

The first US Surgeon General's report on smoking is released.

1964

A single price system is established for American cotton.

1964

The Palestine Liberation Organisation is founded to fight for Palestinian independence.

1964

Nyasaland becomes independent as Malawi.

1964

Northern Rhodesia gains independence as Zambia.

1964

The Civil Rights Act outlaws the most severe forms of discrimination and segregation between races in the US.

An IBM System/360 at the Computer History Museum.

19640407

IBM introduce the IBM System/360 mainframe computer series of 32 bit computers.

1965

The well-worn look becomes popular with jeans.

1965

American scientist James Schlatter discovers the artificial sweetener, Aspartame.

1965

America removes silver from quarters and dimes.

1965

Southern Rhodesia declares unilateral independence from Britain as Rhodesia.

Canadian flag.

1965

Canada adopts the Maple Leaf flag.

The Pillsbury Doughboy.

1965

The Pillsbury Dough Boy first appears in adverts.

1966

Smoking reaches a peak in Japan, with nearly half of adult population (and over 83% of men) smoking.

1966

Barbados declares independence from the UK.

1966

British Guiana declares independence from Britain.

19660629

Barclays Bank launch the Barclaycard - the first credit card in the UK.

1967

Torrey Canyon oil tanker crashes off the coast of UK and spills 29 million gallons of oil into the sea.

1967

The Automatic Teller Machine (ATM) is invented by John Shepherd-Barron.

1967

South Africa issues the gold Krugerrand bullion coin.

1967

Greenpeace, as it will be known from 1971, is founded as the Don't Make a Wave Committee.

1967

Environmental Defence Fund is established.

19670610

So as to appease the Arabs, the Soviet Union severs diplomatic relations with Israel.

Aerial view of Prudhoe Bay "State #1."

1967

Oil is struck in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. It is the largest oil field to be discovered in North America.

First games console, the Magnavox Odyssey.

1968

The Video Game Console is invented by Ralph H Baer.

1968

Imperial Tobacco sponsors Formula 1 racing.

1968

The Calvin Klein fashion house is opened in New York.

1968

Intel microchips use gold circuits.

1968

Student riots erupt around the world.

1968

The Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia is suppressed as Russian tanks roll into Prague.

1968 - 1997

The Troubles in Ireland. Sectarian and nationalist conflict leaves over 3,000 dead.

1968

Martin Luther King, Jr. is assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee.

1968

My Lai Massacre in Vietnam.

Redwood National Park, California.

1968

Redwood National Park is established in California.

Cadbury's-Schweppes logo.

1969

Cadbury's merges with Schweppes to become Cadbury's-Schweppes. They were demerged in 2007.

1969

R. J. Reynolds sponsors NASCAR racing.

1969

Fortune Brands is established in Deerfield, Illinois, by American Brands offering a mixture of hardware and consumable products. It now owns Jim Beam, Maker's Mark, Canadian Club, Teacher's, Laphroiag, Courvoisier, Gilbey's Gin, Cockburn's Port and Harvey's Sherry.

1969

National Environmental Policy Act is passed by US Congress.

1969

Friends of the Earth is founded.

1969

Canada adopts bilingualism.

1969

Neil Armstrong becomes the first man on the Moon, during the successful Apollo 11 mission.

19690407

The Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) commissions the building of the first computer network (ARPANET) based on packet switching. It is one of the earliest forerunners of the internet.

1969

A UNESCO conference "Man and his Environment. A view towards Survival" is held in San Francisco.

1969

The Cuyahoga River catches fire due to oil and chemical pollution. This will become a defining moment for the US environmental movement.

19690302

A Soviet patrol comes into armed conflict with Chinese soldiers on Damansky Island. This conflict led to several further skirmishes across the Sino-Soviet territorial borders.

1969

Over 32.3m tons of chemical fertiliser are used worldwide.

1969

The Santa Barbara oil spill. An offshore drilling platform causes over 200,000 gallons of oil to leak into the Pacific Ocean. The ecological disaster contributed to the modern environmental movement, and to the passing of the National Environmental Act in 1970.

1970

The World Trade Center's first tower is completed and becomes the world's tallest building at 417m.

1970

Seattle's Best Coffee is founded at the Wet Whisker on Pier 70 in Seattle.

1970

Toblerone merges with Suchard to become Interfood.

1970 - 1979

Fusion cuisine becomes more popular increasing interest in exotic ingredients and spices.

1970

Cotton Incorporated is created to revive interest in cotton fabrics.

1970

Rock singer Janis Joplin dies of an accidental heroin overdose.

1970

Gold trades at $200 an ounce.

1970

Salvador Allende takes power in Chile, fuelling American fears that South America will fall to communism.

1970

Thor Heyerdahl's Ra II expedition proved that it was possible to sail across the Atlantic from Morocco to the Caribbean on primitive rafts.

First landing of ab Boeing 747 "Jumbo Jet" in Nuremberg on July 12th, 1970.

1970

The Boeing Jumbo Jet is launched.

US Senator Edmund Muskie, author of the 1970 Clean Air Act, addressing an estimated 50,000 people as keynote speaker for Earth Day in Philadelphia, 1970.

1970

The first Earth Day is celebrated in US.

1970

Environmental Protection Agency is founded in US.

1970

As M. King Hubbert predicted in 1956, U.S. oil production peaks.

An Esso self service pump in 1989.

1970

Imperial Oil (Esso) introduced the first self-service fuel stations in Canada.

1971

Chilean author, Pablo Neruda, wins the Nobel Prize in Literature.

1971

E-mail is first implemented by Ray Tomlinson on the ARPANET system.

1971

Liquid Crystal Display is invented by James Ferguson.

Starbuck's first coffee shop in Pike Place Market, Seattle.

1971

Starbucks is founded in Seattle. Within 40 years it has 15,000 stores in 90 countries.

1971

President Nixon ends the convertibility of US dollars into gold.

Caricature shows Idi Amin, President of Uganda from 1971 to 1979.

1971

Idi Amin seizes control of Uganda and forces many Ugandan-Asians to flee to Britain and other countries.

19711215

Intel releases the world's first commercial microprocessor.

1971

Greenpeace is founded in Vancouver, Canada, and grows to become a major environmental protest movement worldwide.

"Smoking kills" logo.

1972

Health warnings are made compulsory in tobacco advertising.

1972

DDT is banned in the US.

1972

Heroin production in the Golden Triangle booms.

1972

The Erroll Report is issued by the UK Government describing the impact of alcohol on society.

1972

DDT is banned in the US.

Sears Tower.

1973

Skidmore, Owings and Merrill complete the Sears Tower in Chicago, which becomes the tallest building in the world at 442m (527m, including the antennae).

1973

Cotton Incorporated introduces the famous Seal of Cotton mark.

1973

Rock musician Gram Parsons dies of a morphine overdose.

1973

Richard Nixon creates the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA).

1973

General Pinochet seizes power in Chile, backed by the US. His right wing regime continues in power until 1990.

1973

The Six Day War - attempts by Egypt and Syria to invade Israel are defeated by pre-emptive strikes.

1973

The Bahamas declare independence from the UK.

A FedEx Express MD-10 landing at San Jose International Airport.

1973

Federal Express begins operations.

A global oil crisis begins when Arab nations from OPEC place an embargo on exports of oil to a number of countries including the US in response to their support of Israel in the Yom Kippur War. The reduced supply led to a substantial increase in the price of oil worldwide and created a significant strain on the world financial system.

1973

President Nixon launches Project Independence, an initiative created in order to achieve energy self-sufficiency by 1980. Nixon declares that American industry and innovation could free the US of its dependence upon foreign oil.

1973

After the Yom Kippur war, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) announces that it will embargo oil destined for countries that supported Israel during the war. Prices on oil soar in the U.S. and other Western countries.

An engineer standing next to a section of the trans-Alaska pipeline.

1973

Following the 1973 oil crisis, the construction of the trans-Alaska pipeline system gets underway. After four years and $8 billion spent, oil is pumped through to Valdez.

1974

Philip Morris builds the world's largest tobacco facory in Richmond, Virginia.

Statue of Liberty coin.

1974

Now the dollar is no longer backed by gold, US citizens are free to trade gold.

Flag of Grenada.

1974

Grenada declares independence from Britain.

1974

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) was created.

1975

First performance of Wole Soyinka's play Death and The King's Horsemen.

1975

Under 35% of all clothing and fabrics sold in the US are made of cotton as a result of the boom in synthetic fabrics.

1975

The fall of Saigon curtails the sale of narcotics from South East Asia. Mexico fills the gap.

1975

Mahogany starts to become scarce.

1975

Pernod Ricard is founded, merging two great French drinks companies.

Flag of Papua New Guinea.

1975

Papua New Guinea declares independence from Australia.

1975

Angola gains independence from Portugal and a violent civil war breaks out.

1975

Mozambique gains independence from Portugal.

1975

The Waitangi Tribunal addresses the rights of the Maori people in New Zealand.

19750404

Bill Gates founds Microsoft.

Tate and Lyle sugar.

1976

The artificial sweetener, Sucralose, is discovered by scientists at Tate & Lyle.

1976

Howard Hughes dies of liver failure due to excessive codeine intake.

1976

Formation of the Animal Liberation Front in England.

1976

The National Forest Management Act balances the needs of the Timber industry, recreation, wildlife and the environmenet.

1976

American wines achieve top honours at a Paris wine tasting.

1976

Soweto riots challenge the apartheid system in South Africa.

19760401

Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne establish Apple.

1976

Brazilian rubber tappers protest against the cutting down of rubber trees in the Amazon region.

1977

American Spice Trade Association carries out the first thorough nutritional analysis of spices.

1977

World Environment Day is held.

Emblem of the US Department of Energy.

1977

The American Department of Energy is established, amalgamating several organisations into one. The new department is also given responsibility for the nuclear weapons program.

1977

President Carter signs the Emergency Natural Gas Act.

The Energy Systems Integration Facility at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

1977

The Solar Energy Research Institute is established. It later became the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

1978

Edward Said publishes Orientalism which becomes highly influential and controversial among postcolonial theorists.

Amoco Cadiz grounding and oil spill, Brittany, France.

1978

The Amoco Cadiz is wrecked off the coast of France and loses 68 million gallons of fuel.

Cotton Boll weevil.

1978

The Boll Weevil Eradication program starts in the US and cotton production increases.

1978

Mexican poppy fields are sprayed with Agent Orange to destroy the opium crop.

1978

The U.S. Government introduces the Energy Tax Act, or "Gas Guzzler Tax".

1979

Calvin Klein helps to launch the Designer Jeans craze

1979

Rock musician Sid Vicious dies of a heroin overdose.

1979

Opium production flourishes in Afghanistan.

1979

The Canadian Maple Leaf gold bullion coin is introduced.

Protesters during the 1979 Iranian Revolution.

1979

The Shah of Iran flees, prompting the creation of a new Islamic Republic.

1979 - 1988

The Iran-Iraq War ends in a stalemate.

Anti-nuke rally in Harrisburg, prompted by the Three Mile Island incident.

1979

Three Mile Island Nuclear Reactor incident.

1979 - 1989

In support of the Amin regime, Soviet forces invade Afghanistan in December 1979. After 10 years of unsuccessful conflict, their last troops finally withdrew in February 1989.

1979

Mobil struck oil off the Grand Banks in a field later named 'Hibernia'. Many failed start-up attempts ensued, including the sinking of the Ocean Ranger and the deaths of all those on-board.

1979

After the Iranian revolution, Iran transformed from a pro-Western monarchy to an Islamic theocracy under the rule of Ayatollah Khomeini. Iran's oil reserves are restricted, leading to a second oil crisis in the US.

1980

Waiting for the Barbarians published by South African J. M. Coetzee.

1980

Silver hits a high of nearly $50 an ounce following the Russian invasion of Afghanistan.

1980

Gold trades at over $1,800 an ounce.

1980

Foundation of PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) in Norfolk, Virginia.

The award presented to CHP Officer Phil Konstantin by Mothers Against Drunk Driving.

1980

Mothers Against Drunk Driving is founded in Irving, Texas.

1980

Rhodesia becomes Zimbabwe.

1980

Kellogg's introduces Crunchy Nut Cornflakes in the UK after their invention in Manchester.

Ananda Mohan Chakrabarty.

1980

Ananda Chakrabarty uses biotechnology to create a new organism to help break down oil spills. It is the first micro-organism to be patented.

1980

The Energy Security Act is signed by President Carter. It consists of a number of acts involving synthetic and alcoholic fuels, biomass, solar, ocean thermal and geothermal energy types.

1981

Salman Rushdie publishes Midnight's Children.

1981

AIDS is identified as a major new global disease.

1981

British Honduras gains independence from Britain as Belize.

1981

Antigua declares independence from Britain.

1981

The Space Shuttle is launched and continues in service until 2012.

1982

Colombian author, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, wins the Nobel Prize in Literature.

1982

Jacobs coffee merges with Interfood to become Jacobs Suchard.

Argentinian forces shortly after the invasion.

1982

Argentina invades the British Falkland Islands, but is defeated by a British combined arms operation.

1982

The Canada Act passes all legislative power over Canadian affairs to the Canadian Government.

Skoal Bandit advertisement on a Porsche 956 at the Silverstone Classic, 2007.

1983

Skoal Bandits are introduced.

1983

US Congress passes the International Environmental Protection Act.

Tea Pickers, Cisarua Bogor.

1984

The Indonesian Tea Industry is revived.

1984

The International Tobacco Growers' Association is formed.

1984

Don Johnson popularises the white T-shirt in Miami Vice.

1984

Two years of famine strike Ethiopia.

1984

Bhopal Disaster takes place in India when a fertiliser plant leaks poisonous chemicals.

1984

Canadian Co-operative Wheat Producers change their name to Prairie Pools.

1984

The National Coal Council is established to advise private industry and the government on coal research, logistics, production and use.

Miners' Strike Rally in London in 1984

The UK miners' strike began on 5 March 1984 and lasted until 3 March 1985.

1985

British scientist Joe Farman publishes on his discovery of an ozone hole over Antarctica.

1985

Philip Morris diversifies and buys General Foods (including Maxwell House Coffee).

1985

The NutraSweet Company is founded to sell a sweetener based on Aspartame.

1985

Mikhail Gorbachev becomes Soviet leader and introduces a new policy of Perestroika, which encourages the disintegration of the Soviet Bloc in 1989.

19850710

The Rainbow Warrior, a Greenpeace protest ship, is sunk by the French secret service while at harbour in New Zealand.

View of the bow of the RMS Titanic photographed in June 2004 by the ROV Hercules during an expedition returning to the shipwreck of the Titanic.

1985

The wreck of the Titanic is discovered by Robert Ballard.

Nevado del Ruiz, Andes, Colombia: Steam eruption in September 1985 prior to the major eruption.

1985

The Nevado del Ruiz volcano erupts in Columbia killing many thousands of people.

1985

McVitie's introduce the Hobnob biscuit with a milk chocolate variant following two years later.

Front cover of the Paul Simon music album Graceland.

1986

Paul Simon's Graceland album sparks an interest in world music.

The Royal Court Theatre, Sloane Square, where Wole Soyinka worked as a dramaturgist.

1986

Nigerian author, Wole Soyinka wins the Nobel Prize in Literature.

1986

The Lloyd's Building, designed by architect Richard Rogers, is completed in London.

1986

Chernobyl nuclear reactor explodes and melts down in Russia.

1986

Levi Strauss creates the Dockers brand of cotton trousers.

The reverse side of the 1 troy oz. American Platinum Eagle.

1986

The US Mint starts to produce the American Eagle bullion coin.

1986

The Australian Government introduces the Kangaroo Bullion coin.

1986

Gold mines in Ghana intensify production.

1986

The Marshall Islands declare independence from America.

1986

The Australia Act prohibits any British legislation over Australian affairs.

1987

Côte d'Or is purchased by Jacobs Suchard.

1987

Nearly 50% of all clothing and fabrics sold in the US are made of cotton.

1987

Cotton Traders clothing is founded in the UK.

1987

Austrian Dietrich Mateschitz founds Red Bull, a sugar and caffeine based energy drink.

1987

A great storm hits the UK destroying thousands of ancient trees.

19871019

Stocks worldwide devalued dramatically with the Black Monday Crash.

1987

The Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer is adopted, an international agreement to protect the ozone layer.

Historic photograph of the Baltic way taken near the border between Latvia and Lithuania.

1987 - 1991

Singing Revolution. On the 50 year anniversary of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, two million people formed a chain across Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia from Tallinn to Vilnius, demanding secession from the Soviet Union. Finally, on the 6th September 1991, the Soviet Union recognised Latvian, Lithuanian and Estonian independence.

Solar Car "Tokai Challenger" running on the Stuart Highway.

1987

The World Solar Challenge is raced in Australia. 11 teams drove between Darwin to Adelaide (around 1800 miles) in solar-powered vehicles. The winner's average speed was 67mph.

1988

Piper Alpha oil platform explodes in the North Sea off Scotland.

1988

Rowntree's is purchased by Nestlé.

1988

Philip Morris acquires Kraft Foods and combines it with General Foods in 1989.

1988

Artist Jean-Michel Basquiat dies of a heroin overdose.

5 kg silver bar.

1988

In America, the Texan Hunt brothers are found guilty of trying to corner the silver market.

1988

Construction of the Channel Tunnel begins.

1988

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is set up to investigate the causes of climate change.

1989

European countries begin a ban on ozone depleting chemicals.

A cleanup effort after the Exxon Valdez oil spill.

1989

Exxon Valdez oil tanker runs aground off Alaska spilling 11 million gallons.

1989

Failure to renew the International Coffee Agreement causes world prices to plunge.

1989

Lavazza set up a vending machine business with single shot plastic pods.

Young cotton plant.

1989

Cotton Incorporated launches The Fabric of Our Lives advertising campaign.

1989

The Berlin Wall is demolished by protestors on both sides.

1989

America supports an invasion of Panama, ousting General Noriega.

1989 - 1991

On the 9th November 1989, the East German Government began opening sections of the Berlin Wall, thus marking the beginning of its eventual demolition.

The first Web server used by Tim Berners-Lee.

1990

World Wide Web is invented by Tim Berners-Lee.

1990

UN report on climate change warns of a temperature rise of 2 degrees Fahrenheit in thirty five years.

1990

London Protocols on the ozone are agreed by 93 countries.

1990

Jacobs Suchard is purchased by Kraft Foods.

Several bars of Amedei chocolate.

1990

Amedei chocolate is founded in Tuscany.

1990 - 1999

Calvin Klein helps to make cotton boxer shorts popular.

1990

Colombia steps up heroin production.

1990

Namibia is granted independence.

1990

East and West Germany reunite.

1990 - 1991

The First Gulf War. Iraq's invasion of Kuwait is repulsed by an international coalition led by America, Britain and many Arab states.

19900211

Nelson Mandela is released from prison and starts talks with President de Klerk about shifting to black majority rule without bitterness and bloodshed.

1990

Youth for Environmental Sanity is formed.

1990

On August 2nd, Iraqi forces invade Kuwait and seize control of valuable oil territories. After realising that they would soon be ousted, Saddam Hussein's forces begin setting fire to oil wells; around 700 wells are sabotaged.

1991

Sweden becomes the first country to impose a carbon tax to curb CO2 emissions.

1991

Green & Black's chocolate is founded in the UK and pioneers organic and fair-trade practices with farmers in Belize.

Flowers placed on a T-72 tank in Moscow during the Soviet coup d'état attempt.

1991

The USSR is broken up in the wake of popular protests and attempted coups. Russia, Ukraine and other states become independent states.

1991 - 1995

The War in Yugoslavia. Yugoslavia is broken up in the wake of sectarian conflict.

199112

The supreme Soviet of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic ratified the Belavezha Accords. Later that month, the Alma-Ata protocol completed the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

USAF aircraft of the 4th Fighter Wing (F-16, F-15C and F-15E) fly over Kuwaiti oil fires, set by the retreating Iraqi army during Operation Desert Storm in 1991.

1991

The Gulf War oil spill and Kuwaiti oil fires. Iraqi forces open valves at the Sea Island Oil Terminal in a strategic move against U.S forces. This is thought to be the largest oil spill in history. As part of a scorched earth policy, retreating forces also set alight to more than 600 oil wells.

1991

The first offshore wind farm is installed in Vindeby, Denmark.

Opium seized in Helmand.

1992

Afghanistan becomes the world's largest opium producer, overtaking Burma.

1992

The North American Free Trade Area is established between the USA, Canada and Mexico.

1992

Earth Summit is held in Brazil.

1992

The Rio Summit, a UN Conference on Environment and Development, is held in Rio de Janeiro. It produces the Climate Change treaty to stabilize greenhouse gas concentrations and the sustainable development action plan, Agenda 21.

Jeffrey Wigand in 2006.

1993

Biochemist, Jeffrey Wigand, is fired by Brown & Williamson after he demands the removal of a known carcinogen from a pipe tobacco and the company refuses.

1993

The Thai army destroy poppy fields in the Golden Triangle with CIA support.

1993

Nabisco sell their Shredded Wheat brand to Kraft Foods.

Map of the Tratado de Libre Comercio (TLC or NAFTA in English)

1993

The North American Free Trade Agreement is signed between the US, Canada and Mexico.

1993

China becomes a net importer of oil.

1994

Kurt Cobain commits suicide after sustained use of heroin.

1994 - 1999

Nelson Mandela is President of South Africa.

1994 - 1997

NATO enlarges to include many former Eastern Bloc countries.

Flag of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

1994

The North American Free Trade Agreement comes into effect between Canada, Mexico and the United States.

19941211

Russian troops invade Chechnya.

1994

Canada exports a record 2,840 million tonnes of wheat to the US, prompting a new restrictive trade agreement.

1994

Genetically modified foods are first introduced to the market with Calgene's delayed ripening tomato.

The Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River, China.

1994

The construction of the Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River in China gets underway. Construction was completed and the station became operational as of July 4th 2012. It is the largest power station in terms of installed capacity.

1995

Valrhona develop Xocopili chocolate, adding salt and spices to the blend.

Flag of the World Meteorological Organization.

1995

The World Meteorological Organisation reports that the hole in the Earth's ozone layer is expanding rapidly.

1995

Prairie Pools start a process of closing down local grain elevators in Canada.

1995

The US Government recognises 8 genetically modified crops including cotton, potatoes, corn and soybeans.

1995

The first United Nations Climate Change Conference takes place in Berlin.

1996

Chocolove is founded in Boulder, Colorado.

1996

Michael Coe completes his wife, Sophie's, manuscript on the True History of Chocolate. Valrhona Manjari chocolate is described as amongst the finest in the world.

1996

The World Bank and the World Health Organisation call for a global phase-out of leaded petrol.

19960830

The Khasav-Yurt Accord is signed by Maskhadov and Lebed, ending the first Chechen War.

1997

Frank Gehry's Guggenheim building in Bilbao is completed.

1997

Diageo is formed from a merger of Grand Metropolitan and Guinness to become one of the world's largest drinks manufacturers with brands including Smirnoff, Johnnie Walker, Seagram's, Bailey's, Guinness, Gordon's Gin, Jose Cuervo Tequila and Captain Morgan Rum.

1997

Britain returns Hong Kong to China.

1997

The UN’s Kyoto Protocol which commits signatory nations to reduce greenhouse gases and fight global warming is adopted.

1997

The Toyota Prius is introduced as the world's first petroleum/electric hybrid car. It became available to consumers in 2001.

1998

J. K. Rowling publishes her first Harry Potter novel.

The Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumper, Malaysia.

1998

The Petronas twin towers in Kuala Lumpur, designed by Cesar Pelli, become the world's tallest buildings at 452m.

Divine range.

1998

The Divine Chocolate Company is founded in the UK as a partnership between the Kuapa Kokoo cocoa growers collective in Ghana and the Twin trading alternative trading group. It is a pioneering example of fair-trade practice.

1998

Lindt & Spungli purchase Ghirardelli.

1998

The Energy Conservation Law of China comes into force, formulated to facilitate energy savings, improve efficiency, protect the environment and guarantee economic development and welfare for Chinese citizens.

1998

The average price of oil for the year drops to under $18 per barrel (adjusted for inflation to 2011 dollars).

1999

Release of the movie The Insider based on a true story of the television appearance of a tobacco executive who exposed secrets of the Big Tobacco industry in 1995.

1999

Splenda, based on Sucralose, is introduced to the US market and becomes a dominant brand.

Anti-poppy poster in Afghanistan. Poster reads: "Poppies are the crop of death. Grow wheat and make bread".

1999

Afghanistan now produces 75% of the world's heroin.

1999

The Euro is introduced, backed by 15% gold holdings at the European Central Bank.

1999

The World Commission on forests and sustainable development publish Our Forests, Our Future on sustainable forestry.

1999

China takes Macao back from the Portuguese.

1999

Australian voters reject calls to become a republic.

1999

Nunavut is incorporated into Canada.

1999

The first balloon flight around the world is completed by Betrand Piccard and Brian Jones.

19990101

The Euro currency of the Eurozone officially comes into existence.

19991002

Following the Dagestan war and several terrorist attacks , Russian troops invade Chechnya.

1999

Germany introduces the Eco-Tax to promote the use of renewable energy.

2000

Over 580,000 sq km of forest are lost in the Amazon Rainforest from 1991 to 2000 as deforestation accelerates.

2000

The European Union bans leaded petrol.

A street protest against the prolongation of the remaining time for nuclear power plants in Berlin.

2000

Germany passes the Nuclear Exit Law and Renewable Energy Act, seeking to rid the use of nuclear power by 2020.

According to data from BP, world coal production increased by 67% between the years 2000 and 2012.