Science, technology, and the Library of Congress

The walrus' catalog of “many things” as reported by Lewis Carroll comprised a form of footwear, a mode of transportation, a resin-turpentine mixture, a thick-leaved member of the mustard family, a rank of male royalty, an aspect of oceanic temperature, and a possible anatomical aberration of sw...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Physics Today
Main Author: Gray, Dwight E.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing 1965
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3047482
https://pubs.aip.org/physicstoday/article-pdf/18/6/44/8263475/44_1_online.pdf
Description
Summary:The walrus' catalog of “many things” as reported by Lewis Carroll comprised a form of footwear, a mode of transportation, a resin-turpentine mixture, a thick-leaved member of the mustard family, a rank of male royalty, an aspect of oceanic temperature, and a possible anatomical aberration of swine. Although the “many things” dealt with by the Science and Technology Division of the Library of Congress are mostly different from those enunciated by Carroll's walrus, they are fully as varied and vastly more numerous. They have included, for example, aerospace and the Antarctic, permafrost and plastics, diodes and Diesel engines, magnetism and marine borers, lasers and Loran, photointerpretation and physiology, bioregeneration and blood flow, isotopes and infrared, catamarans and cloud seeding, and many others.