SUMMARY: Newly divorced, Andrew Stratton lives in his head and not with his heart. He teaches architectural theory but has never built a building. He writes about The Anatomy of Livable Places communities where form and material are in harmonybut has no sense of where he belongs. He is capable of
Stones absorb water
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1921
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 70 KB
- Volume
- 192
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0016-0032
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
POSSIBLE definitions of " melting point " and " setting point " of jellies are discussed. . It is suggested that theoretically these would be defined incidentally by the temperature at which the " time of relaxation " became infinite, the viscosity remaining finite. Practically it is agreed that they may be arbitrarily defined by standardized exceptional conditions. An apparatus for determining
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
SUMMARY: Newly divorced, Andrew Stratton lives in his head and not with his heart. He teaches architectural theory but has never built a building. He writes about βThe Anatomy of Livable Placesββ communities where form and material are in harmonyβbut has no sense of where he belongs. He is capable
SUMMARY: Newly divorced, Andrew Stratton lives in his head and not with his heart. He teaches architectural theory but has never built a building. He writes about The Anatomy of Livable Places communities where form and material are in harmonybut has no sense of where he belongs. He is capable of
SUMMARY: Newly divorced, Andrew Stratton lives in his head and not with his heart. He teaches architectural theory but has never built a building. He writes about βThe Anatomy of Livable Placesββ communities where form and material are in harmonyβbut has no sense of where he belongs. He is capable o
Newly divorced, Andrew Stratton lives in his head and not with his heart. He teaches architectural theory but has never built a building. He writes about "The Anatomy of Livable Places"' communities where form and material are in harmony'but has no sense of where he belongs. He is capable of deep, t
Newly divorced, Andrew Stratton lives in his head and not with his heart. He teaches architectural theory but has never built a building. He writes about "The Anatomy of Livable Places"' communities where form and material are in harmony'but has no sense of where he belongs. He is capable of deep, t