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  1. Fox Terrier (Wire) (3434 bytes)

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  1. Industrial Revolution (30001 bytes)
    1: ...y [[coal]]) and powered [[machine|machinery]] (mainly in [[textile]] [[manufacturing]]). The developme...
    34: ...f Arts, Manufactures and Commerce]] or, more commonly, [[Society of Arts]] published an illustrated vo...
    65: ...g needed, and thus goods in these materials made only a small proportion of the output.
    83: ... the scientific reasons for the improvement were only discovered later. His family followed in his foo...
    101: At the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, inland transport was by navigable rivers and roads, w...
  2. Steel (28384 bytes)
    8: ...take place in a fairly oxygen-free environment. Unlike copper and tin, liquid iron dissolves carbon q...
    11: ... fairly soft metallic material that can dissolve only a small concentration of carbon (no more than 0....
    21: ...osphorus]] make steel more brittle, so these commonly found elements must be removed from the ore duri...
    28: ... the year [[1000]], the [[Thule]] people of [[Greenland]] began making [[harpoon]]s and other edged to...
    46: ...lized cast iron, and quench-hardened steel, with only a few, probably ornamental, bronze weapons.
  3. Grace Hopper (7469 bytes)
  4. Sophia Loren (9622 bytes)
  5. Gastrointestinal tract (16596 bytes)
    67: ...the stomach, including the nature of the food (mainly its fat and protein content) and the degree of m...
    126: *The first organ is the ''tongue'' which is only present in the phylum [[Chordata]].
    127: ...gus''. It is instead called a ''crop''. It is an enlargement of the esophagus used to store food and e...
  6. Brain (22060 bytes)
    5: ... The [[human brain]] is particularly complex and enlarged.
    16: ...rol, memory, and thinking abilities. Currently, only the symptoms of these diseases can be treated, b...
    41: ...tomy and [[protein]] expression patterns but can only be done after the human or animal is dead.
    48: ... A possible origin of this myth is the fact that only about 10% of the [[neurons]] in the brain are fi...
    52: ...sis can lead to perfect recall of details.'' Not only is this not entirely true, an incompetent or dec...
  7. Beehive (beekeeping) (7741 bytes)
    27: ... types of modern hive in common use, differing mainly in size and number of frames used. Types include...
    48: ...ive gets its name because the frames of the hive only have a top bar, not sides or a bottom bar.
    49: The beekeeper does not provide a foundation (or only provides a fractional foundation) for the bees t...
    52: Unlike the Langstroth hive, the honey cannot be extra...
  8. Bookbinding (7761 bytes)
    28: ...magazines will be the same as the inner pages or only slightly heavier.
    57: ...ere trimmed, so the sizes given are rough values only.
  9. Jewellery (4234 bytes)
  10. Textile (4228 bytes)
  11. Bassoon (11661 bytes)
    6: ... flared slightly at the end. However, there were only six finger-holes and two keys.
    20: ...difficult opening solo in [[The Rite of Spring]] only ascending to the D. Low A at the bottom of the r...
    30: ...ment. The very tip of a reed blade is frequently only 0.1 mm thick.
  12. Balalaika (5108 bytes)
  13. Samoa (9435 bytes)
    72: ...Universal suffrage was extended in [[1990]], but only chiefs (matai) may stand for election to the Sam...
    90: ...wire harness factory, the manufacturing sector mainly processes agricultural products. [[Tourism]] is ...
    95: ...orm of [[Polynesian]] speech still in existence. Only the [[Maori]] of [[New Zealand]] outnumber the S...
  14. Boat (6417 bytes)
    1: ... smaller than most [[ship]]s. Some boats are commonly carried by a ship or on land using trailers.
    85: ...rds the bow and stern, respectively and are used only when the frame of reference is within the vessel...
    94: ... In a ship, there would be several but a boat is unlikely to have more than one. The similar but usual...
  15. Timeline of invention (28171 bytes)
    110: * [[1510]]: [[Pocket watch]]: [[Peter Henlein]]
    311: ...ormer]]: [[William Stanley (physicist)|William Stanley]]
    321: ... [[1888]]: [[Pneumatic tube tire]]: [[John Boyd Dunlop]]
    394: * [[1914]]: [[Tank]], military: [[Ernest Dunlop Swinton]]
  16. Anemometer (11426 bytes)
    7: ...wn that the actual ratio, or factor as it is commonly called, of the velocity of the wind to that of t...
    13: ...ed by the springiness of the connection, and not only is the plate itself driven too far back, but als...
  17. String instrument (8163 bytes)
    32: A vibrating string on its own makes only a very quiet sound, so string instruments are us...
    39: ...e of the harp or piano, for example, this is the only way in which extra notes are obtained. With inst...
  18. Medieval fortification (8517 bytes)
    15: ...[Netherlands]] and [[France]] but these belong mainly to the post-medieval periods. By [[1600]], the ...
    25: ...ooms, including the great hall. Smaller ones had only a watch tower.
  19. List of inventors (14020 bytes)
    113: *[[Robert Heinlein]], (1907-1988), waterbed
  20. Thomas Edison (20653 bytes)
    3: ...evices. "The Wizard of [[Menlo Park, New Jersey|Menlo Park]]" was one of the first inventors to apply ...
    5: ... a conglomerate of nine major film studios (commonly known as the Edison Trust).
    24: ...the track during replay so that one could listen only once. A redesigned model using wax cylinders was...
    26: ===Menlo Park===
    27: ...jor innovation was the [[Menlo Park, New Jersey|Menlo Park]] research lab, which was built in [[New Je...

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