16 research outputs found
A treatise of all the muscles of the body of man
BHR/A-004-376(BIB LVL) w-FONDO ANTIGUO(ES-GrU)b11118313-34cbua_ugr(OCoLC)1085839587AOPRead, AlexanderThe Workes of ... D. Alexander Read...The second editionLondon[8], 270 p. ; [10], 206 p. ; [4], 44, [8] p.Port. orladaCada parte con port. y pag. propi
Automating the Drafting for As-Found Recording and Facility Management Surveys
Much of the time of a facility planner, restoration architect or heritage recorder is spent, on site analysing thebuilding and collecting data and measurements. These will be used later to create the reports and drawings that will provide the basis for the subsequent design but these notes and measurements are just the beginning of the long process of drafting the as-found situation. Errors are inevitable in this type of work but, typically they only come to light, back in the office where confirming a measurement may entail an extra trip to the site, and there are times that they only turn up when a contractor encounters problems on the job A software tool, currently under development, addresses this problem by first helping to structure the note taking process so that more consistent data is collected, and then, automatically creating a 2D or 3D CAD model from the resulting database. This can be done on a laptop computer, before the recording team leaves the site so that the model can be compared with reality and faulty or missing measurements corrected. Furthermore, this combination of database and drawing is linked, allowing queries of the data from inside Autocad or the assembly of a specialized model based on a database query. Point collection techniques supported include traditional and not so traditional) hand measurement, total station surveying equipment and interfaces with other software such as rectification and photogrammetric packages. The applications envisioned include as found recording, facilities management data collection and the possibility of a totally data-driven GIS
To William P. Preston from various correspondents, 1844-1861, and undated
Business correspondence received by William P. Preston of Baltimore, Maryland. Letters include: from W. T. Rice, December 7, 1844; from William G. Wilson, July 16, 1846; from Thomas Spiers, August 25, 1846; from S. C. Thorne, January 12, 1847; surrender of property from James Goff with witness William Alexander, November 3, 1849; from E. A. Merritt, December 31, 1849; from H. W. Bool concerning Baltimore Museum, January 22, 1850; from [?], June 1, 1851; from Henry Miles, May 20, 1851; from Mary Seim, March 8, 1855; from T. Gist Thrale, February 14, 1856; from W. C. B. S. Porter, December 13, 1858; from William Henry and Charles E. Welsh, January 17, 1859; from Thomas E. Simmons, October 19, 1859; three letters from Jonathan Wailes of Batley, England, October 25, 1859, December 29, 1860, September 24, 1861; from A. Smith, May 29, 1860; unsigned letter, June 12, 1861; from James Adams, undated; from Sam Hambleton, undated