Login Home Help Contact

Leonardo

Volume 41, Number 2, April 2008

E-ISSN: 1530-9282 Print ISSN: 0024-094X

Carol Siri Johnson
The Evolution of Illustrated Texts and Their Effect on Science: Examples from Early American State Geological Reports
Leonardo - Volume 41, Number 2, April 2008, pp. 120-127

The MIT Press

Abstract:

In the 19th century, printing methods made significant advances that allowed mass production of illustrated texts; prior to that time, illustrated texts were expensive and rare. The number of illustrated texts thus rose exponentially, increasing the rate of information transfer among scientists, engineers and the general public. The early American state geological reports, funded by the state legislatures, were among the pioneering volumes that used the new graphic capabilities in the improved printing processes for the advancement of science. They contain thousands of illustrations—woodcuts, etchings, lithographs and hand-painted maps—that may be of interest to historians of science, technology, art and culture.


© 2010 Project MUSE®. Produced by The Johns Hopkins University Press in collaboration with The Milton S. Eisenhower Library.