Today in History – October 31, 1941 – Mount Rushmore was completed. The Mount Rushmore project was an incredible feat of engineering and an integration of art and technology. It is the largest work of art on earth with a face that is 60 feet high. Although the workers regularly used dynamite and heavy equipment, [...]
Entries from October 2008
Engineering Education “Today in History” Blog: Mount Rushmore and the Crazy Horse Memorial
October 31st, 2008 · 1 Comment
Tags: Civil Engineering · Construction Engineering · Geological Engineering · Mineral and Mining Engineering
Engineering Education “Today in History” Blog: NYC Subway Opens
October 27th, 2008 · Add a Comment
Today in History – October 27, 1904 – the New York City subway first opens. The New York City Subway is the largest subway car fleet in the world, operates 24-hours-a-day, and (along with the connecting bus system) supports a ridership of approximately seven million daily. That’s now. Although smaller private ventures operated earlier, the [...]
Tags: Architectural Engineering · Civil Engineering · Construction Engineering · Engineering · General Engineering, Engineering Science
Classroom Presenter is the 2008 Premier Courseware Award Winner
October 23rd, 2008 · Add a Comment
The 2008 Premier Award for Excellence in Engineering Education Courseware was awarded today to Richard Anderson, Ruth Anderson, Natalie Linnell, Craig Prince and members of the development team from the University of Washington for Classroom Presenter. The award was presented at the Premier Award Ceremony at the Frontiers in Education Conference, held this year in [...]
Tags: General Engineering, Engineering Science
Engineering Education "Today in History" Blog: Portland Cement
October 21st, 2008 · 1 Comment
Today in History- October 21, 1824 – Portland cement is patented by Joseph Aspdin, a stone mason in Yorkshire, England (UK patent No. 5022). He made it by burning finely pulverized lime and clay at high temperatures in kilns and grinding the mixture into a powder. This hydraulic cement would then harden with the addition [...]
Tags: Architectural Engineering · Civil Engineering · Construction Engineering · General Engineering, Engineering Science
Engineering Education "Today in History" Blog: Discovery of the Structure of DNA
October 18th, 2008 · 3 Comments
Today in History – October 18, 1962 - Watson, Crick, and Wilkins receive Nobel Prize for the discovery of DNA as a double helix. They first proposed their model for the structure of DNA in 1953. As this model was composed of two right-handed, antiparallel, polynucleotide chains coiled around a common axis it is sometimes referred [...]
Tags: BioEngineering and Biomedical Engineering · Biological Systems and Agricultural Engineering · General Engineering, Engineering Science · Life Sciences