Author:Frederik Atherton Fernald
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Works
[edit]Articles in Popular Science Monthly
[edit]- "How Much Animals Know" in Popular Science Monthly, 23 (May 1883)
- "Constructive Elements of the East River Bridge" in Popular Science Monthly, 23 (July 1883)
- "How We Sneeze, Laugh, Stammer, and Sigh" in Popular Science Monthly, 24 (February 1884)
- "German Testimony on the Classics Question" in Popular Science Monthly, 26 (November 1884)
- "Gladiators of the Sea" in Popular Science Monthly, 26 (January 1885)
- "Aristotle as a Zoologist" in Popular Science Monthly, 26 (April 1885)
- "Curiosities of Star-Fish Life" in Popular Science Monthly, 27 (July 1885)
- "How Spelling Damages the Mind" in Popular Science Monthly, 27 (September 1885)
- "Vinegar and its Mother" in Popular Science Monthly, 30 (January 1887)
- "Geikie on the Teaching of Geography" in Popular Science Monthly, 32 (November 1887)
- "Science and Christian Science" in Popular Science Monthly, 34 (April 1889)
- "Concerning Shrews" in Popular Science Monthly, 36 (March 1890)
- "The Botanic Gardens at Kew" in Popular Science Monthly, 37 (May 1890)
- "Telpherage in Practical Use" in Popular Science Monthly, 37 (July 1890)
- "Ancient and Modern Ideas of Hell" in Popular Science Monthly, 37 (August 1890)
- "Ice-Making and Machine Refrigeration" in Popular Science Monthly, 39 (May 1891)
- "Changes in Chemical and Geographical Words" in Popular Science Monthly, 41 (September 1892)
- "Household Arts at the World's Fair" in Popular Science Monthly, 43 (October 1893)
- "Natural Features of Venezuela" in Popular Science Monthly, 48 (February 1896)
- "Our Liquor Laws as Seen by the Committee of Fifty" in Popular Science Monthly, 52 (December 1897)
Some or all works by this author are in the public domain in the United States because they were published before January 1, 1929.
These works may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse