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Smithsonian September 2007 Whitney Dangerfield |
Snapshot: Yangtze River A virtual vacation along China's mighty waterway. |
Science News September 15, 2007 |
Timeline: From the September 11, 1937, issue Heron in New York Zoo has long lease on life... Super-nova is 500,000,000 times brighter than sun... Ocean bottom shaken in New Zealand region... |
America's Civil War November 2007 Joseph G. Bilby |
Grenade!: The Little-Known Weapon of the Civil War Soldiers and sailors on both sides flung, dropped or rolled hand grenades at each other with mixed success during the war. |
America's Civil War November 2007 |
Letter From America's Civil War - November 2007 Maj. Gen. Winfield 'Old Man' Scott was right... |
Science News September 8, 2007 |
Timeline: From the September 4, 1937, Issue Enraged Grizzlies Growl as 50,000 Visitors Stare... Radioactive Potassium is New 'Clock' to Check Age of Earth... Overanxious Parents May be Cause of Children's Stuttering... |
Chemistry World September 7, 2007 Henry Nicholls |
The Oxygen Revolution The standard textbook account of the chemical revolution has the new chemistry of Antoine Lavoisier winning over the entire chemical community almost overnight. But new research suggests this version of events may be plain wrong. |
Reason Aug/Sep 2007 |
30 Years Ago in Reason From August 1977: Robert Poole Jr., "Whither the Libertarian Party?"... "Reason Interview: Milton Friedman"... etc. |
Civil War Times October 2007 Gerard A. Patterson |
America's Civil War: Arming the South With Guns From the North Threats of war did little to hinder Southern arms buyers in New York City as the soon-to-be seceded states began preparing for the inevitable. |
Military History October 2007 Dennis Showalter |
Hessians: The Best Armies Money Could Buy It was just business: Hessian soldiers were the sole asset of a nation in the military-for-hire trade. |
Military History October 2007 |
Letter - Mysteries of Motive In historical investigations, most of it does not help answer that most tantalizing of historians' questions: "Why did he do it?" The question works at all levels, from privates to top officers, when assessing decisions and behaviors in war. |
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