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Circuits in the Sea - The Men, the Ships, and the Atlantic Cable (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,644
Discovery Miles 16 440
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Circuits in the Sea - The Men, the Ships, and the Atlantic Cable (Hardcover)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This book tells the story of the scientific talent and
technological prowess of two nations that joined forces to connect
themselves with a communications cable that would change the world.
In 1855 an American visionary named Cyrus West Field, who knew
nothing about telegraphy, sought to establish a monopoly on
telegraphic revenues between North America and Europe. Field and
the wealthy New Yorkers who formed the first Atlantic cable-laying
company never suspected that spanning the vast and stormy Atlantic
would require 11 years of frustration and horrific financial
sacrifice. The enterprise would eventually engage some of the most
brilliant minds in England, Scotland, and the United States,
attracting men of science, men of wealth, and men of curiosity.
Message time would be cut from more than four weeks to about two
minutes. Such a feat would not have been possible without the
massive ship the Great Eastern, designed by Isambard Kingdom
Brunel, Britain's foremost engineer, or the financial backing of
Thomas Brassey, the era's greatest builder of railroads. Despite
four failed attempts and the enmity that developed between the
Union and Great Britain during America's Civil War, Field never
stopped urging his British friends to perfect a cable that could
function in water as deep as two and a half miles. Without the
unified effort of this small cadre of determined engineers, decades
may have passed before submarine cables became reliable. This is
the story of these men, their ships, and the technology that made
it all possible. Behind the scenes were tough and worthy
competitors who tried to beat them to the punch, adding a sense of
urgency to their monumental task. Some called theAtlantic cable the
greatest feat of the 19th century--with good reason. It perfected
transoceanic communications and connected the world with circuits
in the sea.
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