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4 answers

try the royal Society of UK (www.royalsoc.ac.uk) who have real old papers on these things archived. Also some other journals referring to history of science etc are at Royal Society Collection. In USA, PNAS and Nature publications will give you abstracts of papers published. If you cn not do any of the above - go to local library and go through the microfilm of newspapers and follow up the selected stories on internet/reference libraries etc. Have fun.

2006-11-03 00:29:25 · answer #1 · answered by Priekahm 3 · 0 0

Try the old Arthur Mea encyclopedias or the National Library.

Try this out:

http://www.att.com/attlabs/reputation/timeline/1930.html

2006-11-03 08:34:51 · answer #2 · answered by torrilda 2 · 0 0

Well first I'd try to find the Spell Check button, then worry about technology in the times when it wasn't even a word!

2006-11-03 17:11:25 · answer #3 · answered by Mr. Right 4 · 0 0

the Atom BOMB

2006-11-03 09:14:46 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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