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British Columbia Railways (X) Technology (X)

       
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Information Technology Tales

By: Brad Bradford

... live in flooded, swampy areas? Based on a theory developed in 1930 by British marine biologist Alistair Hardy, Elaine Morgan‘s provocative book ... ...easy-to-harvest shellfish—like today‘s scallops—in abundance.‖ Renowned British brain researcher Michael Crawford, PhD, argues quite persuasively ... ...far-flung as Greece, Sicily, Italy, North Africa, southern Spain, and the British Isles. Vowel signs were missing The Phoenician‘s twenty-two si... ...irst voyage to America. The great navigator‘s son, Ferdinand, founded the Columbian Library at Seville, where his father‘s copy may still be seen. H... ...entific discovery was bringing drastic changes to the American scene. Railways and steamships shrank distances, and machinery superseded hand lab... ...notype Model 1 that became the sensation of the Chicago‘s Worlds Fair—the Columbian Exposition—in 1893. Even so, Mergenthaler still faced a poten... ...e and market metric and library devices. Named chief librarian later at Columbia College, New York, he set up its School of Library Economy—the wo...

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  • Cover Image

Information Technology Tales

By: Brad Bradford

...to live in flooded, swampy areas? Based on a theory developed in 1930 by British marine biologist Alistair Hardy, Elaine Morgan‘s provocative book ... ...tion of its operation on next page after end of this chapter. Renowned British brain researcher Michael Crawford, PhD, argues quite persuasively ... ...far-flung as Greece, Sicily, Italy, North Africa, southern Spain, and the British Isles. Vowel signs were missing The Phoenician‘s twenty-two sign... ...irst voyage to America. The great navigator‘s son, Ferdinand, founded the Columbian Library at Seville, where his father‘s copy may still be seen. H... ...cientific discovery was bringing drastic changes to the American scene. Railways and steamships shrank distances, and machinery superseded hand lab... ...notype Model 1 that became the sensation of the Chicago‘s Worlds Fair—the Columbian Exposition—in 1893. Even so, Mergenthaler still faced a potenti... ...ce and market metric and library devices. Named chief librarian later at Columbia College, New York, he set up its School of Library Economy—the wo...

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