Map of Washington and Marion Counties (Kentucky), on a horizontal scale of 2 miles per inch and a vertical scale of 1200 feet per inch. Includes streams, roads, railroads, Indian mounds, houses, county lines, and a color scheme to delineate...
Composite drawings; United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865; Forts & fortifications; Armored vessels; Gunboats
Composite five sketches relating to the attack on Fort Hindman, a Confederate fort on the Arkansas River, in 1863. Each photo has a caption: View of the attack on Fort Hindman Jan. 11th 1863; the "Rattler," "Glide" and Ram...
Atlas of the City of Louisville, Kentucky prepared from official records, private plans and actual surveys. Thirty plates cover the entire city of Louisville and parts of the surrounding county. Each plate shows names of businesses and property...
Reprint of 1831 map of Louisville, Kentucky, on a scale of 400 feet to the inch. Inverted, with northern boundary of Ohio River at the bottom of the page and southern boundary Prather Street (now Broadway) at the top, Beargrass Creek at left, and...
Map, on a scale of 2 miles = 1 inch, of Whitley County, Kentucky (areas: 600.8 square miles), with roads, county lines, railroads, streams, and elevations marked, and a color scheme indicating Carboinferous (coal measures above the conglomerate and...
Map, on a scale of 400 feet to an inch, showing the Louisville and Portland Canal, with Sand Island, Rock Island, Goose Island, Shippingport, Corn Island, Louisville, Portland, New Albany, Clarksville, Falls City, and Jeffersonville also labeled....
Very fragile map of Louisville, Kentucky, circa 1894-1897, at a scale of 1000 feet per inch, with city limit, property limits, and street car lines demarcated. Includes sub map south of "L" Street, at a scale of 1600 feet per inch.
Map of Louisville, Kentucky, at a scale of 1600 feet per inch, with Jeffersonville and New Albany, Indiana visible north of the Ohio River. Includes railroads, electric car lines, parks & public grounds, cemeteries, public buildings, water...
Three Louisville Slugger baseball bats. The top bat is signed by Jimmie Foxx. The middle has a picture of Harry (Hank) Gowdy. A sign on the bottom bat reads "The original Louisville Slugger used by Honus Wagner his first year in the National...
Woodblock prints of, clockwise from top left: main building and quadrangle of a campus, with insets of a long, low building, a four-story building with dome, and a body of water surrounded by fence; illustrated title page for "The American...
Historically in the area of pediatric heart failure, few options have been available that are specifically designed to provide pediatric circulatory support. Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) was the traditional method of choice, providing...
Heat pipes; Solar heating--Passive systems; Solar heating--Research; Solar energy--Research
The one dimensional heat transfer, thermal diode effect of heat pipes makes
them ideal for passive solar applications. Gains in a heat pipe passive solar wall are not
lost during cloud cover or periods of low irradiation. An experimental model was...
Map of Louisville, Kentucky, on a scale of 800 feet to the inch, culled from 1970 reprint of 1832 City Directory. Spans from Ohio River to the north and Prather Street (now Broadway) to the south. List of references at lower left lists government...
Three tomatoes -- two whole tomatoes and one tomato half -- in a row with measuring tape behind them. The tomatoes end at about the 11 inch mark on the tape.
Maps, on a scale of 200 feet per inch, of "every lot or parcel of ground" in the central area of Louisville, Kentucky in 1876, including details such as precise dimensions, owners' names, building materials (wood vs. brick) and whether...