The essential features of the system were embodied in a report made to the French National Assembly by the Academy of Sciences in 1791. A number of other nations were invited to cooperate with France in establishing the new system, and Holland, Denmark... Circular of the Bureau of Standards - Page 41956Full view - About this book
| United States. National Bureau of Standards - 1906 - 28 pages
...addressed to the Bureau of Standards in regard to the metric system of weights and measures and its use. The essential features of the system were embodied...report made to the French National Assembly by the Academy of Sciences in 1791. A number of other nations were invited to cooperate with France in establishing... | |
| 1912 - 718 pages
...Director of the Bureau of Standards at Washington, for the data from which the following is taken. The essential features of the system were embodied...report made to the French National Assembly by the Academy of Sciences, in 1791. A number of other nations were invited to co-operate with France in establishing... | |
| 1932 - 24 pages
...addressed to the Bureau of Standards in regard to the metric system of weights and measures and its use. The essential features of the system were embodied...report made to the French National Assembly by the Academy of Sciences in 1791. A number of other nations were invited to cooperate with France in establishing... | |
| W. M. Searby, Albert Schneider - 1913 - 346 pages
...addressed to the Bureau of Standards in regard to the metric system of weights and measures and its use. The essential features of the system were embodied...report made to the French National Assembly by the Academy of Sciences in 1791. A number of other nations were invited to co-operate with France in establishing... | |
| American Society of Civil Engineers - 1908 - 1374 pages
...taken from this publication by permission kindly granted by Dr. SW Stratton, Director of the Bureau: "The essential features of the system were embodied...report made to the French National Assembly by the Academy of Sciences in 1791. A number of other nations were invited to cooperate with France in establishing... | |
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