Scientific American Supplement, No. 561, October 2, 1886

audiobook

Scientific American Supplement, No. 561, October 2, 1886

by Various Authors

EN·~4 hours·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total
1

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN SUPPLEMENT NO. 561 - NEW YORK, OCTOBER 2, 1886 - Scientific American Supplement. Vol. XXII., No. 564. - Scientific American established 1845 - Scientific American Supplement, $5 a year. - Scientific American and Supplement, $7 a year.

3:48
2

COMPOUND HYDRAULIC PRESSES.

8:33
3

JET PROPELLERS.—HYDRAULIC PROPULSION OF VESSELS.

11:21
4

THE NEW ARMY GUN.

5:58
5

COMBUSTION, FIRE-BOXES, AND STEAM BOILERS.1 - By JOHN A. COLEMAN.

20:19
6

ATLANTIC STEAMERS.1 - By W. JOHN.

28:06
7

EXAMINATION QUESTIONS IN GENERAL CONSTRUCTION.

9:43
8

CELEBRATION OF THE FIVE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HEIDELBERG, AUGUST, 1886.

6:38
9

IMPURITIES IN PHOTOGRAPHIC CHEMICALS, AND TESTS FOR SAME.

5:55
10

THE CATASTROPHE AT CHANCELADE.

4:42

Description

Step back into the bustling world of 1880s science, where curiosity drove everything from garden beds to iron furnaces. This collection captures a single week of discovery, presenting a lively cross‑section of the era’s research, illustrated sketches, and practical reports that once filled the pages of a leading popular science periodical.

Among the highlights, readers will hear about an Agave americana finally bursting into flower in upstate New York, and a daring attempt to isolate fluorine by electro‑splitting hydrofluoric acid. Engineers explain how hydraulic presses can be timed for maximum efficiency, while a physician demonstrates a novel photographic method for watching heart‑beat responses to drugs. Articles also travel abroad, describing primitive iron smelting in Bengal, the aftermath of a French mine disaster, and detailed comparisons of Atlantic steamships and new artillery pieces.

All of this is delivered in clear, engaging narration, complete with period illustrations that bring Victorian laboratories and workshops to life. Listeners will gain a vivid sense of how nineteenth‑century innovators tackled the problems that still shape modern technology.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (233K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Jeannie Howse, Victoria Woosley and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net

Release date

2005-07-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

VA

Various Authors

This book is credited to multiple contributors rather than a single writer, bringing together different voices, styles, or perspectives in one place. That often makes for a lively listening experience, especially in anthologies, collections, and themed compilations.

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