Scientific instruments such as telescopes and distillation columns have played a prominent role in the history of science, but the key material of which these instruments were made has received scant attention. Focusing on the glass used to make scientific instruments and on the supply chains on which its production relied–allows us to see that “glass” covers a variety of materials and that the nature of glass depends on the material knowledge and environmental expertise invested in its manufacture. Between the seventeenth and the twentieth centuries, glassware moved back and forth between a dependence on processing locally sourced materials and reusing household items and a reliance on intraregional supply chains of specialty materials
none2The history of glass has a documented technological development since at least 3,500 years base...
From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, every laboratory was filled with glassware, and every train...
From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, every laboratory was filled with glassware, and every train...
Scientific instruments such as telescopes and distillation columns have played a prominent role in t...
At the turn of the twentieth century, so-called “glass diseases” seriously affected the use of scien...
The history of glass has a documented technological development since at least 3,500 years based on ...
none1noThis volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the int...
The history of glass has a documented technological development since at least 3,500 years based on ...
none1noThis volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the int...
This volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the interactio...
This volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the interactio...
This volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the interactio...
This volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the interactio...
This book presents a history of the development of glass. Chapters discuss the nature of the materia...
The early history of glass and its discovery. The virtues of glass for civilization – transparent, i...
none2The history of glass has a documented technological development since at least 3,500 years base...
From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, every laboratory was filled with glassware, and every train...
From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, every laboratory was filled with glassware, and every train...
Scientific instruments such as telescopes and distillation columns have played a prominent role in t...
At the turn of the twentieth century, so-called “glass diseases” seriously affected the use of scien...
The history of glass has a documented technological development since at least 3,500 years based on ...
none1noThis volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the int...
The history of glass has a documented technological development since at least 3,500 years based on ...
none1noThis volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the int...
This volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the interactio...
This volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the interactio...
This volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the interactio...
This volume surveys the historical relations of science and technology by privileging the interactio...
This book presents a history of the development of glass. Chapters discuss the nature of the materia...
The early history of glass and its discovery. The virtues of glass for civilization – transparent, i...
none2The history of glass has a documented technological development since at least 3,500 years base...
From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, every laboratory was filled with glassware, and every train...
From the mid-nineteenth century onwards, every laboratory was filled with glassware, and every train...