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Cover of The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook: Dating and Sex
Cover of The Worst-Case Scenario Survival Handbook
Cover of Hide
Cover of Ace Your Interview!
Cover of 100 Bullshit Jobs...And How to Get Them
Cover of Top 100 Careers for College Graduates
  • *** This comment contains spoilers! ***

    Mechanical engineers research, develop, design, manufacture, and test tools, engines, machines, and other mechanical devices. They work on power-producing machines such as electric generators, internal combustion engines, and steam and gas turbines, as well as power-using machines such as refrigeration and air-conditioning equipment, machine tools, material handling systems, elevators and escalators, industrial production equipment, and robots used in manufacturing. Mechanical engineers also design tools that other engineers need for their work. Mechanical engineering is one of the broadest engineering disciplines. Mechanical engineers may work in production
    operations in manufacturing or agriculture, maintenance, or technical sales; many are administrators or managers.

    Marine engineers and naval architects are involved in the design, construction, and maintenance of ships, boats, and related equipment. They design and supervise the construction of everything from aircraft carriers to submarines and from sailboats to tankers. Naval architects work on the basic design of ships, including hull form and stability. Marine engineers work on the propulsion, steering, and other systems of ships. Marine engineers and naval architects apply knowledge from a range of fields to the entire design and production process of all water vehicles. Workers who operate or supervise the operation of marine machinery on ships and other vessels also may be called marine engineers or, more frequently, ship engineers. ... (continue)

    Mechanical engineers research, develop, design, manufacture, and test tools, engines, machines, and other mechanical devices. They work on power-producing machines such as electric generators, internal combustion engines, and steam and gas turbines, as well as power-using machines such as refrigeration and air-conditioning equipment, machine tools, material handling systems, elevators and escalators, industrial production equipment, and robots used in manufacturing. Mechanical engineers also design tools that other engineers need for their work. Mechanical engineering is one of the broadest engineering disciplines. Mechanical engineers may work in production
    operations in manufacturing or agriculture, maintenance, or technical sales; many are administrators or managers.

    Marine engineers and naval architects are involved in the design, construction, and maintenance of ships, boats, and related equipment. They design and supervise the construction of everything from aircraft carriers to submarines and from sailboats to tankers. Naval architects work on the basic design of ships, including hull form and stability. Marine engineers work on the propulsion, steering, and other systems of ships. Marine engineers and naval architects apply knowledge from a range of fields to the entire design and production process of all water vehicles. Workers who operate or supervise the operation of marine machinery on ships and other vessels also may be called marine engineers or, more frequently, ship engineers.

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    ― Posted on Sep 23, 2008 | Add your feedback

Cover of THE BRITISH MUSEUM LITTLE BOOK OF TREASURES
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    MUMMY AND COFFIN OF A PRIESTESS
    EGYPTIAN, c.1000 BC
    This fine anthropomorphic coffin belonged to an unnamed Theban priestess who is represented on the lid, wearing a heavy wig and garlanded with flowers. Found complete with her neatly bandaged mummy, it is painted inside and out with figures of gods and sacred texts intended to protect her on her journey through the underworld.
    The first Egyptian experiments in mummification took place around 2500 BC; a thousand year later it had become a sophisticated art. In the case of rich patrons who could afford the full treatment, the corpse was taken to the embalmer's workshop, where the internal organs were removed and the body dried out with natron. Sometimes the treated organs were returned to the body cavity, but generally they were kept separate and the cavity stuffed with linen or sawdust. It was then sewn up and the body wrapped on linen bandages. The whole process with its attendant rituals took 70 days, after which the body was placed in its wooden coffin for the journey to the tomb.

    THE ROSETTA STONE
    EGYPTIAN, 196 BC
    It may not be among the most beautiful exhibits, but the Rosetta Stone (height 114 com), which provided the key to the decipherment of ancient Egyptian writing, is nonetheless one of the British Museum's greatest treasures. It was discovered in 1799 by French military engineers working at Rosetta (modern Rashid) in the Nile Delta. Such fragments of reused ancient masonry were common, and it would probably have been discarded had it not been for the officers in charge of the party who guessed that its inscription - in Greek, hieroglyphics and Demotic - might be of significance. Copies of the inscription were sent to scholars around the world. Having read the Greek version of the text - a priestly decree listing the gifts of Ptolemy V to various temples - they were able to find the hieroglyphic equivalent of certain words such as royal names and by comparing these with other sources slowly unravelled the mysteries of the ancient Egyptian language.

    SHIVA VISHAPAHARANA
    CHOLA, c.AD 950
    Shiva, the creator and destroyer, is one of the three principal Hindu deities and figures prominently in Indian myth. In this magisterial bronze (height 59 cm) of Shiva Vishapaharana (Shiva destroying Poison), the god is shown seated on a throne in the position of royal ease, his right foot resting on a lotus. His body is adorned with fine jewellery; he wears odd earrings indicative of his dual male/female nature. A crescent moon rests in his piled-up matted hair, the hair of the wandering and homeless ascetic. In accordance with convention, he is shown with four arms in order to display attributes and gestures suggestive of his infinite qualities. His upper hands hold an antelope, referring to his life as a forest yogi, and an axe, symbolic of the cutting of bonds of ignorance. His lower left hand holds a cobra representing the poison of this myth, while the right makes the gesture of reassurance. ... (continue)

    MUMMY AND COFFIN OF A PRIESTESS
    EGYPTIAN, c.1000 BC
    This fine anthropomorphic coffin belonged to an unnamed Theban priestess who is represented on the lid, wearing a heavy wig and garlanded with flowers. Found complete with her neatly bandaged mummy, it is painted inside and out with figures of gods and sacred texts intended to protect her on her journey through the underworld.
    The first Egyptian experiments in mummification took place around 2500 BC; a thousand year later it had become a sophisticated art. In the case of rich patrons who could afford the full treatment, the corpse was taken to the embalmer's workshop, where the internal organs were removed and the body dried out with natron. Sometimes the treated organs were returned to the body cavity, but generally they were kept separate and the cavity stuffed with linen or sawdust. It was then sewn up and the body wrapped on linen bandages. The whole process with its attendant rituals took 70 days, after which the body was placed in its wooden coffin for the journey to the tomb.

    THE ROSETTA STONE
    EGYPTIAN, 196 BC
    It may not be among the most beautiful exhibits, but the Rosetta Stone (height 114 com), which provided the key to the decipherment of ancient Egyptian writing, is nonetheless one of the British Museum's greatest treasures. It was discovered in 1799 by French military engineers working at Rosetta (modern Rashid) in the Nile Delta. Such fragments of reused ancient masonry were common, and it would probably have been discarded had it not been for the officers in charge of the party who guessed that its inscription - in Greek, hieroglyphics and Demotic - might be of significance. Copies of the inscription were sent to scholars around the world. Having read the Greek version of the text - a priestly decree listing the gifts of Ptolemy V to various temples - they were able to find the hieroglyphic equivalent of certain words such as royal names and by comparing these with other sources slowly unravelled the mysteries of the ancient Egyptian language.

    SHIVA VISHAPAHARANA
    CHOLA, c.AD 950
    Shiva, the creator and destroyer, is one of the three principal Hindu deities and figures prominently in Indian myth. In this magisterial bronze (height 59 cm) of Shiva Vishapaharana (Shiva destroying Poison), the god is shown seated on a throne in the position of royal ease, his right foot resting on a lotus. His body is adorned with fine jewellery; he wears odd earrings indicative of his dual male/female nature. A crescent moon rests in his piled-up matted hair, the hair of the wandering and homeless ascetic. In accordance with convention, he is shown with four arms in order to display attributes and gestures suggestive of his infinite qualities. His upper hands hold an antelope, referring to his life as a forest yogi, and an axe, symbolic of the cutting of bonds of ignorance. His lower left hand holds a cobra representing the poison of this myth, while the right makes the gesture of reassurance.

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    ― Posted on Aug 24, 2008 | Add your feedback

Cover of M. C. Escher ®
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    "He challenged the hegemony of so-called natural laws with renderings of courtyards where "up" and "down" lose their meaning, of structures that flout gravity and perspective, of abstract patterns that gradually metamorphose into wriggling, flapping beasts."

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    ― Posted on Jan 23, 2008 | Add your feedback

Cover of The Key to Love
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    "Finding love should not end your thirst for fulfillment, but serve as a well from which drink more deeply."

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    ― Posted on Feb 19, 2008 | Add your feedback

Cover of Squeamish About Sushi
Cover of Great Sex Tips
Cover of Half-Life 2

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