Waubonsee Community College

A most damnable invention, dynamite, nitrates, and the making of the modern world, Stephen R. Bown

Label
A most damnable invention, dynamite, nitrates, and the making of the modern world, Stephen R. Bown
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [251]-257) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
A most damnable invention
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
59003109
Responsibility statement
Stephen R. Bown
Review
"Humanity's desire to harness the destructive capacity of fire is a saga that extends back to the dawn of civilization. The true age of explosives, when they radically and irrevocably changed the world, however, began in the 1860s with the remarkable intuition of a sallow Swedish chemist named Alfred Nobel." "As the use of explosives soared and growing populations consumed more food, nations scrambled for the scarce yet vital organic ingredient needed for both. The quest for nitrates takes us from the rural stables and privies of preindustrial Europe to the monopoly trading plantations in India and to the Atacama Desert in South America. Nitrates were as valuable in the nineteenth century as oil is in the twenty-first and were the cause of similar international jockeying and power politics." "A Most Damnable Invention is a human tale of scientific obsession, shadowy immorality, and historical irony, and a testament to the capacity for human ingenuity during times of war. It is also a cautionary reminder of the cyclical nature of history, showing how the solutions of yesterday eventually give rise to the problems of today."--Jacket
Sub title
dynamite, nitrates, and the making of the modern world
Table Of Contents
An epic quest -- Playing with fire: A thousand years of explosives -- Black powder's soul: The quest fro the elusive saltpeter -- Blasting oil and blasting cap: Alfred Nobel and the terrible power of nitroglycerin -- Construction and destruction: dynamite and the engineering revolution -- The great equalizer: explosives and social change -- Inventions, patents, and lawsuits: The golden age of explosives -- The Guano trade: The toil for Chilean saltpeter and the war of the Pacific -- The profits of dynamite: a gift to science and civilization -- Battle of the Falklands: The struggle for the global nitrate supply -- The father of the war: Fritz Haber's World-changing discovery -- Epilogue: War and the green revolution
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Genre
Content
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