Okay done a bit of research:
History. Some historians claim a Greek philosopher and mathematician named Archytas, who lived about 400 B.C., invented the screw. The ancient Greeks used screws for various purposes. The Greek mathematician and inventor Archimedes supposedly developed a machine that uses a screw to raise water (see Archimedean screw ). The ancient Greeks also developed the screw press, a device consisting of two flat surfaces connected with screws. Tightening the screws brings the surfaces together and puts increasing pressure on whatever is placed between the surfaces. The Greeks used the screw press to squeeze juice from grapes to make wine and from olives to produce oil.
For many centuries, screws were made with simple hand tools. But during the 1500's, engineers developed the screw-cutting lathe, a machine that permitted more efficient and precise production of wooden and metal screws. Screws then began to replace nails and pegs as fasteners in joining hinges and other metal items to wood and in holding together parts of locks, watches, and other articles. Advancements in techniques for cutting finer, more exact threads led to the adoption in the mid-1800's of the first standardized screw thread. Screws with points that could be easily twisted through wood also appeared during the 1800's. Previously, all screws had flat ends and could be inserted only in specially drilled holes.
SCREW YOU !