The message below, which I just received, may be of interest to HES-List
members. The archive is open at
<http://www.pubs.royalsoc.ac.uk/index.cfm?page=1373>
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> Jilliene Jewell
> Publishing Editor, Notes and Records of the Royal Society
> Over 340 years of landmark science available for first time
> 14 Sep 2006
> The complete archive of the Royal Society journals, including some
> of the most significant scientific papers ever published since
> 1665, is to be made freely available electronically for the first
> time today (14th September 2006) for a two month period.
> The archive contains seminal research papers including accounts of
> Michael Faraday's groundbreaking series of electrical experiments,
> Isaac Newton's invention of the reflecting telescope, and the first
> research paper published by Stephen Hawking.
> The Society's online collection, which until now only extended back
> to 1997, contains every paper published in the Royal Society
> journals from the first ever peer-reviewed scientific journal,
> Philosophical Transactions in 1665, to the most recent addition,
> Interface.
> Professor Martin Taylor, Vice President of the Royal Society and
> Chair of the Publishing Board, said: "The Royal Society archive is
> a unique source of information for practicing scientists, science
> historians and indeed anyone with an in interest history. The rich,
> varied and sometimes entertaining archive documents the earliest
> accounts of the seventeenth centurys new experimental philosophy',
> through which an understanding of the natural world was acquired by
> experiment and observation. This provided the foundation of the
> modern scientific method."
> The archive provides a record of some key scientific discoveries in
> the last 340 years, including Halley's description of his comet' in
> 1705, details of the double helix of DNA by James Watson and
> Francis Crick in 1954 and Edmond Stone's breakthrough in 1763 that
> willow bark cured fevers, leading to the discovery of salicylic
> acid and later the development of aspirin.
> Some of the more obscure papers explore rudimentary prototypes of
> modern day technology. Trials proposed by Robert Boyle in 1665
> hypothesize on the possibilities of blood transfusions, pondering
> "Whether a fierce dog stocked with the blood of a cowardly dog may
> not become more tame?". A forerunner for ventilators was also
> discussed in a paper by Robert Hooke in 1667 entitled "An account
> of an experiment made by Mr. Hook [sic], of preserving animals
> alive by blowing through their lungs with bellows".
> The archive also contains more amusing experiments and observations
> such as the use of electrical conductors to cure muscle stiffness
> and a bizarre description of a "Very Odd Monstrous Calf" which
> illustrate the inquisitive nature of science's early pioneers.
> Professor Taylor added: "In addition to being a valuable scientific
> resource, the journal archives are also a rich historical record
> documenting a time which is hard to imagine given the knowledge we
> have today."
> The electronic archive contains papers documenting the discovery of
> new planets, the first descriptions of organisms through a
> microscope, and the first account of photography. Early journal
> papers contain fascinating descriptions of how Captain James Cook
> preserved the health of his crew aboard the HMS Endeavour and the
> astonishment of 18th century Society by the performance of a eight
> year-old Mozart.
> The archive will be freely available online until December 2006
> and, following this period, will be available as part of Royal
> Society journal subscription packages or alternatively on a-pay per-
> view basis.
>
E. Roy Weintraub
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