01189nam0-2200373li-450-99000026964020331620090910111937.00026964USA010026964(ALEPH)000026964USA0100269642001990041971971----y0itay0103----baengGBThermodynamic theory of structure, stability and fluctuationsP. Glansdorff and I. PrigogineLondonWiley1971XXIII, 306 p.306 p.ill.23 cmTermodinamica536.7GLANSDORFF,P.26090PRIGOGINE,I.543418Sistema bibliotecario di Ateneo dell' Università di SalernoRICA990000269640203316536.7 GLA4733/CBS536.700326971BKSCI1990041920001110USA01171620020403USA011635PATRY9020040406USA011619RSIAV79020090910USA011119RSIAV79020090910USA011119Thermodynamic theory of structure, stability and fluctuations1514240UNISA03566oam 22005414a 450 991048201240332120250905110031.097807006022610700602267(CKB)5590000000429739(OCoLC)1227916161(MdBmJHUP)muse95544(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/88508(MiAaPQ)EBC31554390(Au-PeEL)EBL31554390(Perlego)4507878(OCoLC)1440383538(oapen)doab88508(ODN)ODN0011025050(EXLCZ)99559000000042973919981202d1982 uy 0engur|||||||nn|ntxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Cattle GuardIts History and Lore1st ed.University Press of Kansas1982Lawrence, Kan. :Univ. Press of Kansas,1982.©1982.1 online resource (XX, 233 Seiten) : Illustrationen, Diagramme9780700631001 0700631003 Cover -- Title Page -- Dedication -- List of Illustrations -- Foreword -- Preface -- 1. The Cattle Guard: An Overview -- 2. The Need for Cattle Guards -- 3. Cattle-Guard Innovators, 1900 to 1920 -- 4. The Spread of Cattle Guards, 1920 to 1930 -- 5. The Railroad Cattle Guard -- 6. Cornish Stiles, Lich Gates, and Cattle Guards -- 7. Lore about Cattle Guards -- 8. Unusual Cattle Guards -- 9. Makers of Cattle Guards -- 10. The Economics of Cattle Guards -- 11. Cattle Guards Around the World -- Appendix -- Sources of Information -- List of Contributors of Information -- Index -- Back Cover.With this study the cattle guard joins the sod house, the windmill, and barbed wire as a symbol of range country on the American Great Plains. A U.S. folk innovation now in use throughout the world, the cattle guard functions as both a gate and a fence: it keeps livestock from crossing, but allows automobiles and people to cross freely. The author blends traditional history and folklore to trace the origins of the cattle guard and to describe how, in true folk fashion, the device in its simplest form—wooden poles or logs spaced in parallel fashion over a pit in the roadway—was reinvented and adapted throughout livestock country.Hoy traces the origins of the cattle guard to flat stone stiles unique to Cornwall, England, then through the railroad cattle guard, in use in this country as early as 1836, and finally to the Great Plains where, probably in 1905, the first ones appeared on roads. He describes regional variations in cattle guards and details unusual types. He provides information on cattleguard makers, who range from local blacksmiths and welders to farmers and ranchers to large manufacturers.In addition to documenting the economic and cultural significance of the cattle guard, this volume reveals much about early twentiethcentury farm and ranch life. It will be of interest not only to folklorists and historians of agriculture and Western America, but also to many Plainsarea farmers, ranchers, and oilmen.Rural communitiesbicsscElectronic books. Rural communitiesRural communities636.2/01Hoy James F1023124MdBmJHUPMdBmJHUPBOOK9910482012403321The Cattle Guard2430578UNINA