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What was the first real 'automobile'? And what actually constitutes
an automobile, anyway? SUCH questions are not easy to answer, but
Keith Ray has embraced the challenge and compiled a myth-busting
book packed with fascinating facts. Ranging from the 'firsts' in
motoring technology such as the disc brake, fuel injection and
four-wheel drive, through the legislation that brought in the
driving test, speed limit and first conviction, all the way to the
first roundabout, dual carriageway, motorway, motoring organisation
and fatality, Ray not only reveals what happened first but rights
historic wrongs along the way. The V8 engine did not originate in
America, as most people believe, and Rudolf Diesel certainly did
not invent the diesel engine. Packed with photographs, First Gear
is the perfect gift for any motoring enthusiast.
The straight eight engine, also known as the inline eight engine,
was the driving force behind some of the most fascinating luxury
vehicles of the first half of the twentieth century. From its
introduction in the 1920s through its demise in the 1950s, the
straight eight graced a number of upmarket vehicles from makers
like Pontiac, Packard, and Daimler, and even appeared under the
hood of the hyper-exclusive Rolls-Royce Phantom IV, of which only
eighteen models were produced. Although it was eventually replaced
by the V8 engine, the straight eight engine can be found in some of
the most valuable and sought-after vehicles of all time. Keith
Ray's The Straight Eight Engine is the first volume to be published
about this extraordinary mechanism. Featuring four hundred images,
the book is a lush tribute to an automotive component likely to
never be equaled for smoothness and refinement.
The Neolithic in Britain was a period of fundamental change: human
communities were transformed, collectively owning domesticated
plants and animals, and inhabiting a richer world of material
things: timber houses and halls, pottery vessels, polished flint
and stone axes, and massive monuments of earth and stone. Equally
important was the development of a suite of new social practices,
and an emphasis on descent, continuity and inheritance. These
innovations set in train social processes that culminated with the
construction of Stonehenge, the most remarkable surviving structure
from prehistoric Europe. Neolithic Britain provides an up to date,
concise introduction to the period of British prehistory from c.
4000-2200 BCE. Written on the basis of a new appreciation of the
chronology of the period, the result reflects both on the way that
archaeologists write narratives of the Neolithic, and how Neolithic
people constructed histories of their own. Incorporating new
insights from the extraordinary pace of archaeological discoveries
in recent years, a world emerges which is unfamiliar, complex and
challenging, and yet played a decisive role in forging the
landscape of contemporary Britain. Important recent developments
have resulted in a dual realisation: firstly, highly focused
research into individual site chronologies can indicate precise and
particular time narratives; and secondly, this new awareness of
time implies original insights about the fabric of Neolithic
society, embracing matters of inheritance, kinship and social ties,
and the 'descent' of cultural practices. Moreover, our
understanding of Neolithic society has been radically affected by
individual discoveries and investigative projects, whether in the
Stonehenge area, on mainland Orkney, or in less well-known
localities across the British Isles. The new perspective provided
in this volume stems from a greater awareness of the ways in which
unfolding events and transformations in societies depend upon the
changing relations between individuals and groups, mediated by
objects and architecture. This concise panorama into Neolithic
Britain offers new conclusions and an academically-stimulating but
accessible overview. It covers key material and social
developments, and reflects on the nature of cultural practices,
tradition, genealogy, and society across nearly two millennia.
The Neolithic in Britain was a period of fundamental change: human
communities were transformed, collectively owning domesticated
plants and animals, and inhabiting a richer world of material
things: timber houses and halls, pottery vessels, polished flint
and stone axes, and massive monuments of earth and stone. Equally
important was the development of a suite of new social practices,
with an emphasis on descent, continuity and inheritance. These
innovations set in train social processes that culminated with the
construction of Stonehenge, the most remarkable surviving structure
from prehistoric Europe. Neolithic Britain provides an up-to-date,
concise introduction to the period of British prehistory from c.
4000-2200 BCE. Written on the basis of a new appreciation of the
chronology of the period, the result reflects both on the way that
archaeologists write narratives of the Neolithic, and how Neolithic
people constructed histories of their own. Incorporating new
insights from the extraordinary pace of archaeological discoveries
in recent years, a world emerges which is unfamiliar, complex and
challenging, and yet played a decisive role in forging the
landscape of contemporary Britain. Important recent developments
have resulted in a dual realisation: firstly, highly focused
research into individual site chronologies can indicate precise and
particular time narratives; and secondly, this new awareness of
time implies original insights about the fabric of Neolithic
society, embracing matters of inheritance, kinship and social ties,
and the 'descent' of cultural practices. Moreover, our
understanding of Neolithic society has been radically affected by
individual discoveries and investigative projects, whether in the
Stonehenge area, on mainland Orkney, or in less well-known
localities across the British Isles. The new perspective provided
in this volume stems from a greater awareness of the ways in which
unfolding events and transformations in societies depend upon the
changing relations between individuals and groups, mediated by
objects and architecture. This concise panorama into Neolithic
Britain offers new conclusions and an academically-stimulating but
accessible overview. It covers key material and social
developments, and reflects on the nature of cultural practices,
tradition, genealogy, and society across nearly two millennia.
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