The Highest Frontier

The Highest Frontier
Author: Joan Slonczewski
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Total Pages: 500
Release: 2012-08-28
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780765367723

The first SF novel in more than ten years from the scientist and author of A Door into Ocean. A girl goes to college in orbit, in a future transformed by technology, global warming, and invasive species.

High Frontier

High Frontier
Author: William F. Trimble
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Pre
Total Pages: 359
Release: 2010-11-23
Genre: Transportation
ISBN: 0822974266

From the early days of hot air ballooning to supersonic aircraft, High Frontier chronicles the history of flight in Pennsylvania. Early experimentation with lighter-than-air craft in the nineteenth century was followed by significant advances in aerodynamics, the advent of the airplane, and its gradual acceptance by the public. The state had its own contingent of inventors and aviators, who flew and crashed their homemade machines in countless exhibitions. After World War I commercial flights took wing, including government airmail delivery, and expanded airports, federal and state regulation of aeronautics laid the groundwork for the growth of the industry.

To Reach the High Frontier

To Reach the High Frontier
Author: Roger D. Launius
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Total Pages: 542
Release: 2002
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780813127217

Most towns did not have hospitals of their own before the mid-twentieth century, and Kentucky towns were no exception. KentuckyÕs first real hospital opened in 1823, but it was in LouisvilleÑtoo far away to serve many Kentucky communities, especially in cases of emergency. For this and other reasons, the lifespan of the average Kentuckian in the 1800s was only 40 years. Today it has grown to 75, and trained medical professionals are available to most communities throughout the state. Healing Kentucky tells how medical care changed in Kentucky over 200 years and became the much safer and better system we know today. It also describes early healing practices and methods used to care for the sick in the days before safe hospitals, even on Civil War battlefields. From cholera epidemics to polio and plastic surgery, readers will learn much about the people who shaped medicine in Kentucky.