A brief cartographic‐iconographic view of the eastern Baltic coast up to the 16th century

Imago Mundi ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-52
Author(s):  
Arnolds Spekke
The Holocene ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Normunds Stivrins ◽  
Alex Brown ◽  
Siim Veski ◽  
Vita Ratniece ◽  
Atko Heinsalu ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
pp. 129-149
Author(s):  
Kevin C. Karnes

Karnes’s chapter examines the Crimean War’s Baltic theater. It considers ways in which acts of listening structured understandings of conscription, encampment, combat, and mourning as experienced by individuals stationed or living on the eastern Baltic Coast. It focuses in particular mass mobilization of Russian troops, which occasioned many first encounters: between culturally heterogeneous Romanov subjects; between “Russians” and Europeans from the West; and between Europeans both Eastern and Western, as well as non-European others. The chapter argues that such encounters refashioned mental geographies of Europe, and that listening to others’ voices in wartime had the power to shatter habitual associations between peoples and spaces.


Author(s):  
L.E. Murr ◽  
V. Annamalai

Georgius Agricola in 1556 in his classical book, “De Re Metallica”, mentioned a strange water drawn from a mine shaft near Schmölnitz in Hungary that eroded iron and turned it into copper. This precipitation (or cementation) of copper on iron was employed as a commercial technique for producing copper at the Rio Tinto Mines in Spain in the 16th Century, and it continues today to account for as much as 15 percent of the copper produced by several U.S. copper companies.In addition to the Cu/Fe system, many other similar heterogeneous, electrochemical reactions can occur where ions from solution are reduced to metal on a more electropositive metal surface. In the case of copper precipitation from solution, aluminum is also an interesting system because of economic, environmental (ecological) and energy considerations. In studies of copper cementation on aluminum as an alternative to the historical Cu/Fe system, it was noticed that the two systems (Cu/Fe and Cu/Al) were kinetically very different, and that this difference was due in large part to differences in the structure of the residual, cement-copper deposit.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marika Mägi
Keyword(s):  

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