A Manual of Naval Hygiene

A Manual of Naval Hygiene
Author: United States. Navy Department. Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Publisher:
Total Pages: 356
Release: 1943
Genre: Medicine, Naval
ISBN:

Foreword: Sanitary and hygienic problems of air and of land, of surface and of subsurface craft present themselves daily to the medical officer of the Navy. Air constituents and pressures, arctic and tropical temperatures and humidities, food and water, clothing, lighting, these and many other facets are as much the care and consideration of the naval surgeon as are the diseases and wounds of the personnel in sickness and battle. And yet the field of naval hygiene is a sparsely covered one as far as textbooks are concerned. It is in response to this need that a number of officers of the Medical Department have collaborated with me in the preparation of this volume. To them I extend my sincere appreciation and thanks. Ross T. McIntire, Surgeon General, United States Navy.

Field Operations Manual

Field Operations Manual
Author: United States. Occupational Safety and Health Administration
Publisher:
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1974
Genre: Industrial hygiene
ISBN:

Naval Hygiene

Naval Hygiene
Author: James Chambers Pryor
Publisher:
Total Pages: 540
Release: 1918
Genre: Hygiene
ISBN:

The history of salt

The history of salt
Author: Evan Marlett Boddy
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages: 170
Release: 1881
Genre: History
ISBN:

How frequently it happens that those natural productions with which we are to a certain extent superficially familiar, are to a great many not only uninteresting, but are regarded as subjects more or less beneath their notice; and by others as deleterious to the human race, and therefore to be cautiously used or scrupulously avoided. Another peculiarity is, that the more we are accustomed to them, the more our interest wanes, and probably at last degenerates into apathetic indifference. We can only attribute these ignorant conceits and apparently unaccountable obliquity of judgment to two causes: an assumption of wisdom, and an unenlightened mind, unwilling to learn and loath to improve. Another hindrance which to a considerable extent precludes the study of what one may truthfully designate every-day subjects, is the restless furor for artful counterfeits of science, which are nothing else than the emanations of vain and visionary minds mixing together, as it were, an amalgam of truth and error. The present age is wonderfully productive of these eccentric ideas, while at the same time it is unhappily pregnant with the most unnatural and anti-healthful habits. The mystified authors take good care to run into the wildest extremes, so that their marvellous schemes and quaint devices (fortunately for their fellow-creatures) cause them to be justly derided by the thoughtful and disregarded by the sensible, though not a few are caught by the tinsel.