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The Structural Engineer, Volume 73, Issue 2, 1995
The structural engineer on the super highway John Setchell writes from Kings Lynn: A growing community of people from all walks of life regularly sit in front of their computers and, via a small box called a ‘modem’ and the telephone socket on the wall, ‘chat’ to each other. This community is worldwide, but generally speaking the language used is English. (Although some speak American, which is slightly different!) Verulam
This paper presents a state-of-the-art review of monitoring the inservice behaviour of structures. Much specialist monitoring has been undertaken in geotechnical and foundation engineering, and this knowledge and expertise is now beginning to be applied to monitoring superstructures. Issues dressed in this paper include reasons for installing a monitoring scheme, in what circumstances and at what stage monitoring is appropriate, and the practical issues of how to proceed in terms of where instrumentation should be situated and what instrumentation and techniques should be used. R.M. Moss and S.L. Matthews
The oldest finds of glass (10,000 years BC) were made in Egypt. Since that time glassware, drinking glasses and bottles have been produced from the basic components of quartz sand, soda and limestone. Glass is transparent, resistant to acid chemical agents and has a high density; it is therefore the ideal material for flasks, pipettes and containers in chemical laboratories. Professor Dr Ing. G. Sedlacek, Dr K. Blank and J. Gusgen