The Rise Of Scrap Metals

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
H. Foster Bain
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
16
File Size:
542 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1932

Abstract

Probably no more significant change has come into the lives of men in the past two hundred years than their shift from major dependence on plants and animals to major dependence on minerals. From the dawn of history, nay from long before that dawn, food and clothing had been man's main concern. The wandering of the tribes in pastoral ages was in search of grass for their cattle; the patient work of the "man with the hoe" has ever been to supply food for himself and family and if he accomplished so much he had little strength, energy, or ambition for other things. The great civilizations of the past arose in the fertile valleys where food supply was abundant or on shores where by grace of the wind and primitive wooden ships food could, if needed, be imported. Provision for the "seven lean years" by storing the abundance of the seven fat years was long held up as the highest example of statesmanship and the ambitions of the Roman populace did not go beyond bread and circuses, the former the product of a plant and the latter involving essentially contests of men and other animals. Through all those centuries of want, misery, and warfare it was, for example, an axiom that "an army fights oh its belly." Now an army rides to the battle line in trucks; its members stand up and fight with tons and tons of metal and other minerals. Food supply is assumed, and rightly so, for in this modern world of ours shortage of food is chargeable at once to poor organization or deficiency of transport. The areas in which famines occur are those in which the one or the other
Citation

APA: H. Foster Bain  (1932)  The Rise Of Scrap Metals

MLA: H. Foster Bain The Rise Of Scrap Metals. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1932.

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