The Warmth of Clothing. Transparent Photographs. Transmission of Power by Wire Hopes. 1839 and 1840 it was introduced on the Regent's canal for towing barges through the tunnel beneath the Harrow road against the screw duck foot propeller and others but was not found to be economic. He had many times seen a simi lar application of the principle ; the Ely rope of an ordinary as a novelty the introduction of endless wire ropes for trans sisted in the running of the ropes at a high velocity which claim. pedition from both the New York and the Halifax sections river of superheated water of which
Image details
Contributor:
Penta Springs Limited / Alamy Stock PhotoImage ID:
2ABWC01File size:
44 MB (3.1 MB Compressed download)Releases:
Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?Dimensions:
3326 x 4620 px | 28.2 x 39.1 cm | 11.1 x 15.4 inches | 300dpiDate taken:
2 October 2019Photographer:
CorantosMore information:
This image could have imperfections as it’s either historical or reportage.
The Warmth of Clothing. Transparent Photographs. Transmission of Power by Wire Hopes. 1839 and 1840 it was introduced on the Regent's canal for towing barges through the tunnel beneath the Harrow road against the screw duck foot propeller and others but was not found to be economic. He had many times seen a simi lar application of the principle ; the Ely rope of an ordinary as a novelty the introduction of endless wire ropes for trans sisted in the running of the ropes at a high velocity which claim. pedition from both the New York and the Halifax sections river of superheated water of which the breadth is about rated into divergent streams forming a sort of delta ; its depth (as determined by the use of the current drag) being nowhere more than 100 fathoms. This river rests upon the remarkable stratum of 60 to 65° the thickness of which distinguishes the Western from the Eastern Atlantic be tween Bermuda and Azores while at less than double the depth of that layer we come into what IN -clearly polar water. Permanence of the Hydrocarbon Gas. more water than linen while the latter takes up and gives, scientific american, 1874-06-13