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1. Freeman, Albert Substitute materials. Interior view of two-foot section of built-up wooden pipe, twenty-four inches in diameter. These pipes, used in place of corrugated iron or reinforced concrete pipes, are made of sections cut from short lengths of wood. About 100,000 feet of these wooden pipes were installed in 1942 in drainage culverts, storm sewers and conduits under highways and at army camps, naval stations, airfields and ordnance plants 1943 Jan

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19641258
2. Freeman, Albert Substitute materials. Wood culverts for steel. Assembly of an emergency sectional wood pipe, twenty-four inches in diameter. These pipes, used in place of corrugated iron or reinforced concrete pipes, are made of sections cut from short lengths of wood. Locking of adjacent rings with hardwood dowel pins produces a flexible structure. About 100,000 feet of these wooden pipes were installed in 1942 in drainage culverts, storm sewers and conduits under highways and at army camps, naval stations, airfields and ordnance plants 1943 Jan

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19641257
3. Freeman, Albert Substitute materials. A shipment of 1,488 feet of 18-inch, 24-inch, 30-inch and 36-inch wooden pipe on one flat car. Weight 70,020 pounds. An equal footage of reinforced concrete pipe weighs 455,412 pounds, requires over ten cars. These pipes, used in place of corrugated iron or reinforced concrete pipes, are made of sections cut from short lengths of wood. Locking of adjacent rings with hardwood dowel pins produces a flexible structure. About 100,000 feet of these wooden pipes were installed in 1942 in drainage culverts, storm sewers and conduits, under highways and at army camps, naval stations, airfields and ordnance plants 1943 Jan

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19641259
4. Stuyt, L. C. P. M. Materials for subsurface land drainage systems Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations; 2005

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 14581041
5. Stuyt, L. C. P. M. Materials for subsurface land drainage systems Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations; 2000

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 12169446
6. Loving, Morris Wooten Concrete pipe drainage structures for highways and railroads Chicago, Ill: American concrete pipe association; c1937

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 17169459
7. Loving, Morris Wooten Concrete pipe for irrigation and drainage Chicago, Ill: American concrete pipe association; 1939

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 8782270
8. Substitute materials. A shipment of 1,488 feet of 18-inch, 24-inch, 30-inch and 36-inch wooden pipe on one flat car. Weight 70,020 pounds. An equal footage of reinforced concrete pipe weighs 455,412 pounds, requires over ten cars. These pipes, used in place of corrugated iron or reinforced concrete pipes, are made of sections cut from short lengths of wood. Locking of adjacent rings with hardwood dowel pins produces a flexible structure. About 100,000 feet of these wooden pipes were installed in 1942 in drainage culverts, storm sewers and conduits, under highways and at army camps, naval stations, airfields and ordnance plants

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Collection
19641259
9. Stuyt, L. C. P. M. Materials for subsurface land drainage systems

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
14581041
10. Stuyt, L. C. P. M. Materials for subsurface land drainage systems

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
12169446
11. Substitute materials. Interior view of two-foot section of built-up wooden pipe, twenty-four inches in diameter. These pipes, used in place of corrugated iron or reinforced concrete pipes, are made of sections cut from short lengths of wood. About 100,000 feet of these wooden pipes were installed in 1942 in drainage culverts, storm sewers and conduits under highways and at army camps, naval stations, airfields and ordnance plants

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Collection
19641258
12. Substitute materials. Wood culverts for steel. Assembly of an emergency sectional wood pipe, twenty-four inches in diameter. These pipes, used in place of corrugated iron or reinforced concrete pipes, are made of sections cut from short lengths of wood. Locking of adjacent rings with hardwood dowel pins produces a flexible structure. About 100,000 feet of these wooden pipes were installed in 1942 in drainage culverts, storm sewers and conduits under highways and at army camps, naval stations, airfields and ordnance plants

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Collection
19641257
13. Loving, Morris Wooten Concrete pipe drainage structures for highways and railroads

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
17169459
14. Loving, Morris Wooten Concrete pipe for irrigation and drainage

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
8782270
15. Harildstad, Erling Grøftematerialer i jordbruket og forsøk med noen drenrørtyper Vollebekk: Norges Landbrukshøgskole; 1968

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 8507634
16. Munn, B. The practical land drainer New York: C.M. Saxton & company; 1855

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 3579685


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