The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service
  Label Dataset Type Subdivision Identifier
1. Harris & Ewing Uncle Sam makes own glass. Washington, D.C. Aug. 24. All optical glass used by the United States Navy is manufactured and finished by the Bureau of Standards in Washington. L. Maxwell, of the Glass Section, Bureau of Standards, is shown cutting molten glass into the mold. He uses ordinary tailor's shears in cutting the hot substance which is about as soft as hot molasses candy [1936 or 1937] August 24

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 20274945
2. Harris & Ewing Uncle Sam makes own glass. Washington, D.C. Aug. 24. All optical glass used by the United States Navy is manufactured and finished by the Bureau of Standards in Washington. L. Maxwell, of the Glass Section, Bureau of Standards, is shown cutting molten glass into the mold. He uses ordinary tailor's shears in cutting the hot substance which is about as soft as hot molasses candy

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
20274945
3. Palmer, Alfred T. Fiberglass manufacture, Owens-Corning, Toledo, Ohio. Gossamer filaments of glass, each twenty times finer than human hair, are drawn together into a strand at more than a mile a minute, and wound on a forming tube on the floor below. The fibers are drawn from glass melted in an electric furnace above the worker's head 1942 Feb

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19635726
4. Palmer, Alfred T. Fiberglass manufacture, Owens-Corning, Toledo, Ohio. Gossamer filaments of glass, each twenty times finer than human hair, are drawn together into a strand at more than a mile a minute, and wound on a forming tube on the floor below. The fibers are drawn from glass melted in an electric furnace above the worker's head 1942 Feb

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19635727
5. Palmer, Alfred T. Fiberglass manufacture, Owens-Corning, Toledo, Ohio. Gossamer filaments of glass, each twenty times finer than human hair, are drawn together into a strand at more than a mile a minute, and wound on a forming tube on the floor below. The fibers are drawn from glass melted in an electric furnace above the worker's head

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19635727
6. Palmer, Alfred T. Fiberglass manufacture, Owens-Corning, Toledo, Ohio. Gossamer filaments of glass, each twenty times finer than human hair, are drawn together into a strand at more than a mile a minute, and wound on a forming tube on the floor below. The fibers are drawn from glass melted in an electric furnace above the worker's head

BIBFRAME Works
Work
StillImage
Collection
19635726
7. Seward, Thomas P. High temperature glass melt property database for process modeling Westerville, Ohio: American Ceramic Society; c2005

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 14275002
8. High temperature glass melt property database for process modeling

BIBFRAME Works
Work
Text
Monograph
14275002
9. Glass furnaces

LC Subject Headings (LCSH)
Topic
SimpleType
Authority
sh85055148
Glass melting furnaces ; Glass tank furnaces
10. International Conference on Borate Glasses, Crystals and Melts (8th : 2014 : University of Pardubice)

LC Name Authority File (LCNAF)
ConferenceName
SimpleType
Name
Authority
no2017054506
Conference on Borate Glasses, Crystals and Melts, International (8th : 2014 : University of Pardubice) ; Borate8 (2014 : University of Pardubice)
11. International Conference on Borate Glasses, Crystals and Melts (7th : 2011 : Halifax, N.S.)

LC Name Authority File (LCNAF)
ConferenceName
SimpleType
Name
Authority
nb2015016303
Conference on Borate Glasses, Crystals and Melts, International (7th : 2011 : Halifax, N.S.) ; Borate7 (7th : 2011 : Halifax, N.S.)
12. Glass melting

LC Subject Headings (LCSH)
Topic
SimpleType
Authority
sh85055162
Glass--Melting
13. Percy, Hubert Montagu New materials in sculpture London: Alec Tiranti Ltd; 1970

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 17788771
14. Percy, Hubert Montagu New materials in sculpture London: A. Tiranti; 1962

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 8450661
15. Percy, Hubert Montagu New materials in sculpture London: A. Tiranti; 1965

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 4542111
16. Percy, Hubert Montagu New materials in sculpture New York: Transatlantic Arts; 1966

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 10343388
17. International Conference on Borate Glasses, Crystals and Melts

LC Name Authority File (LCNAF)
ConferenceName
SimpleType
Name
Authority
no2017054533
Conference on Borate Glasses, Crystals and Melts, International


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