ROMAN TEMPLES UNEARTHED IN GERMANY
Sixty Roman temples to ancient German gods.
Such is the astonishing spoil turned up out of the earth by the spades
of archaeologists in the old German city of Trier on the Moselle. It
is the most striking find of its kind ever made north of the Alps, the
largest group of Roman religious edifices known outside of Italy. Much
still remains to be uncovered, buried under the debris of centuries,
but enough has already been laid open to the light to add a long and
important chapter to our knowledge of the life of the Romans, Germans,
and Gauls who thronged the streets of this 'second Rome' over a millennium
and a half ago.
STUDY TESTS FOR AIR IN GASOLINE
When you stop at the filling station for five gallons of gas, are you
getting all gasoline, or are you paying for part air?
The question of air dissolved in gasoline, and means of testing for
its amount, was one of the problems to engage the attention of the twenty-second
National Conference on Weights and Measures. It's this air in solution
that makes the gas appear to boil when pumped into the glass chamber
of the filling station pump, said Dr. Oscar C. Bridgeman, research associate
at the Bureau of Standards for the Society of Automotive Engineers.
FLUORINE UNLOCKS CHEMICAL SECRETS
Fluorine, the gaseous chemical element heretofore isolated in only
small quantities, has been produced electrolytically in thousand cubic
feet quantities by Profs. Wilder D. Bancroft and Newton C. Jones of
Cornell.
As a result, a new method of analyzing complex organic compounds will
be developed. Determining just how some chemicals are put together has
been difficult because dissociation with electric current, a fruitful
method for some compounds, can not be used on solutions that don't react
to electricity. Fluorine, however, reacts with almost any organic substance,
whether electrolytically conducting or not, and it displaces that portion
of the substance that would have appeared at the anode pole if the substance
had been electrolyzed.