Read The Knowledge: How to Rebuild Our World From Scratch Online
Authors: Lewis Dartnell
Tags: #Science & Mathematics, #Science & Math, #Technology
Seymour, John. 2009.
The New Complete Book of Self-sufficiency
. London: Dorling Kindersley.
Shapin, Steven. 1996.
The Scientific Revolution
. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Shelley, Percy Bysshe. 1818. “Ozymandias.”
The Examiner,
January 11.
Sherman, Irwin W. 2006.
The Power of Plagues
. Washington, DC: ASM Press.
Shirky, Clay. 2010.
Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age
. New York: The Penguin Press.
Shuval, Hillel I., Charles G. Gunnerson, and DeAnne S. Julius. 1981.
Appropriate Technology for Water Supply and Sanitation: Night-soil Composting
. (ATL 17-389) Washington, DC: The World Bank.
Silverman, Steve. 2001.
Einstein’s Refrigerator: And Other Stories from the Flip Side of History
. Kansas City, MO: Andrews McMeel Publishing.
Smith, Gerald. 2009. “The Chemistry of Historically Important Black Inks, Paints and Dyes.”
Chemistry Eduction in New Zealand
, (May): 12–15.
Sobel, Dava. 1995.
Longitude: The True Story of a Lone Genius Who Solved the Greatest Scientific Problem of His Time
. New York: Walker & Company.
Solomon, Steven. 2011.
Water: The Epic Struggle for Wealth, Power, and Civilization
. New York: Harper Perennial.
Solomon, Susan, Gian-Kasper Plattner, Reto Knutti, and Pierre Friedlingstein. 2009. “Irreversible Climate Change Due to Carbon Dioxide Emissions.”
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
106 (6): 1704–09.
Spinney, Laura. 1996. “Return to Paradise: If the People Flee, What Will Happen to the Seemingly Indestructible?”
New Scientist
, July 20: 26–31.
Standage, Tom. 2010.
An Edible History of Humanity
. New York: Walker & Company.
Stanford, Geoffrey. 1976.
Short Rotation Forestry: As a Solar Energy Transducer and Storage System
.
(ATL 08-301) Conference on Energy and Agriculture, St. Louis, MO, June. Dallas: Greenhills Foundation.
Starkey, Paul. 1989.
Harnessing and Implements for Animal Traction:
An Animal Traction Resource Book for Africa
.
(ATL 06-294)
Braunschweig and Wiesbaden: German Appropriate Technology Exchange (GATE) and Friedr. Vieweg & Sohn.
Stassen, Hubert E. 1995.
Small-Scale Biomass Gasifiers for
Heat and Power: A Global Review.
World Bank Technical Paper Number 296. Washington, DC: World Bank.
Stein, Matthew R. 2008.
When Technology Fails: A Manual for Self-Reliance,
Sustainability, and Surviving the Long Emergency
. 2nd ed. White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Publishing.
Stern, Nicholas. 2006.
The Economics of Climate Change.
The Stern Review. HM Treasury.
Stern, Peter. 1979.
Small Scale Irrigation.
(ATL 05-217) London: Intermediate Technology Publications.
———, ed. 1983.
Field Engineering
. (ATL 02-71) Bourton on Dunsmore, UK: Practical Action Publishing.
Stoner, Carol Hupping, ed. 1973.
Stocking Up: How to Preserve the Foods You Grow, Naturally
.
(ATL 07-292) Emmaus, PA: Rodale Press.
Strauss, Neil. 2009.
Emergency: This Book Will Save Your Life.
New York: It Books / HarperCollins.
Strawbridge, Dick, and James Strawbridge. 2010.
Practical Self Sufficiency: The Complete Guide to Sustainable Living
. London: Dorling Kindersley.
Sutton, Christine. 1986. “The Impossibility of Photography.”
New Scientist
, 25 December 1986 / 1 January 1987: 40–43.
Tainter, Joseph A. 1988.
The Collapse of Complex Societies
. New Studies in Archaeology. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Thwaites, Thomas. 2011.
The Toaster Project: Or a Heroic Attempt to Build a Simple Electric Appliance from Scratch.
New York: Princeton Architectural Press,.
United Nations Development Fund for Women. 1988.
Cereal Processing
. (ATL 06-299) New York: UNIFEM.
United States Army. 2002.
Survival (Field Manual 3-05.70)
. Fort Belvoir, VA: Army Publishing Directorate.
United States Department of Agriculture. 1974.
Wood Handbook: Wood as an Engineering Material
. (ATL 25-662) Madison, WI: United States Forest Service Forest Products Laboratory, USDA.
———, 2008.
Cuba’s Food & Agriculture Situation Report.
Office of Global Analysis, Foreign Agricultural Service, USDA.
United States Department of Energy. 1980.
Fuel from Farms: A Guide to Small-scale Ethanol Production
.
(ATL 19-417)
Golden, CO: Solar Energy Research Institute United States Department of Energy.
Usher, Abbott Payson. 1982.
A History of Mechanical Inventions
. Rev. ed. (1954) Mineola, NY: Dover Publications. First published 1929 by Harvard University Press.
van Lengen, Johan. 2008.
The Barefoot Architect: A Handbook for Green Building
. Bolinas, CA: Shelter Publications.
van Vuuren, D. P., M. Meinshausen, G-K. Plattner, et al. 2008. “Temperature Increase of 21st Century Mitigation Scenarios.”
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
105 (40): 15258–62.
van Winden, John. 1990.
General Metal Work, Sheet Metal Work and Hand Pump Maintenance.
(ATL 04-134) TOOL Foundation.
Vigneault, François. 2007. “Papermaking 101.”
Craft
(Winter): 132–37. http://makezine.com/projects/papermaking-101/.
Vogler, Jon. 1981.
Work from Waste: Recycling Wastes to Create Employment
.
(ATL 33-804) London: Intermediate Technology Publications.
———. 1984.
Small-Scale Recycling of Plastics
.
(ATL 33-799) London: Intermediate Technology Publications.
Volunteers in Technical Assistance.
Using Water Resources
. 1977. (ATL 12-327) Mount Rainier, MD: VITA.
Ware, Mike. 1997. “On Proto-photography and the Shroud of Turin.”
History of Photography
21 (4): 261–69.
———. 2002. “Luminescence and the Invention of Photography: ‘A Vibration in the Phosphorus.’”
History of Photography
26 (1): 4-15.
———. 2004. Mike Ware: “Alternative Photography.” Website, http://www.mikeware.co.uk
Watson, Simon, and Murray Thomson. 2005.
Feasibility Study: Generating Electricity from Traditional Windmills.
Draft Final Report. Loughborough, UK: The Centre for Renewable Energy Systems Technology, Loughborough University.
Weisman, Alan. 2007.
The World Without Us
. New York: Thomas Dunne Books.
Wells, R. G. (interview by Brian James, Oral History Research Unit, Bournemouth University, UK, September 13, 1995). “Construction of Radio Equipment in a Japanese POW Camp.” Oral History of Defense Electronics. Bournemouth, UK: Bournemouth University. http://histru.bournemouth.ac.uk/CHiDE/Oral_History_of_Defence_Electronics/r_g_wells.htm.
Werner, David, with Carol Thuman and Jane Maxwell. 2011.
Where There Is No Doctor: A Village Health Care Handbook.
Berkeley, CA: The Hesperian Foundation.
Weygers, Alexander G. 1973.
The Making of Tools
. (ATL 04-103)
New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Company.
———. 1974.
The Modern Blacksmith
. (ATL 04-108) New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold.
Whitby, Garry. 1983.
Glassware Manufacture for Developing Countries
.
(ATL 33-792) Technical Papers 2. London: Intermediate Technology Development Group.
Wigginton, Eliot, ed. 1973.
Foxfire 2: Ghost Stories, Spring Wild Plant Foods, Spinning and Weaving, Midwifing, Burial Customs, Corn Shuckin’s, Wagon Making and More Affairs of Plain Living.
(ATL 02-33) New York: Anchor Books.
Wingate, Michael. 1985.
Small-Scale Lime-burning: A Practical Introduction
. (ATL 25-675) London: Intermediate Technology Publications.
Winston, Robert. 2010.
Bad Ideas? An Arresting History of Our Inventions
. London: Bantam Press.
Wiseman, John “Lofty.” 2010.
SAS Survival Handbook: The Ultimate Guide to Surviving Anywhere
. Rev. ed. New York: Collins.
Wood, T. S. 1981.
Simple Assessment Techniques for Soil and Water
. (ATL 05-213) New York: Coordination in Development, Environment and Development Program.
Wyndham, John. 1951.
The Day of the Triffids
. New York: Doubleday.
Yeo, Richard. 2001.
Encyclopaedic Visions: Scientific Dictionaries and Enlightenment Culture
. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Zalasiewicz, Jan. 2008.
The Earth After Us: What Legacy Will Humans Leave in the Rocks?
Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
It goes without saying that while it is my name that appears on the front cover, this book would never have come into existence without the hard work and expertise of a great number of people helping me along the way. So starting from the beginning, with my awesome literary agent, Will Francis: Thank you, Will, for getting in touch back in 2008 after reading
Life in the Universe
and for all your guidance and encouragement over the years since, and, let’s be honest, for outright hassling me into going beyond simply mulling over this concept in the back of my mind and actually researching and writing a book on it . . . Thanks too to Kirsty Gordon, Rebecca Folland, and Jessie Botterill in the Janklow & Nesbit agency offices in London for all their help, as well as PJ Mark and Michael Steger in New York.
Thank you to Stuart Williams at The Bodley Head and Colin Dickerman at Penguin Group (USA) for showing so much enthusiasm for the idea and for your faith in me actually pulling this ambitious project off. I’m enormously indebted to Colin, and especially Jörg Hensgen (The Bodley Head) for his unbelievably skillful and perceptive editing of my writing: any finesse in this finished book is from his exquisite craftsmanship, which has uncovered and polished a sculpture hidden within the roughly hewn block of stone I submitted as a first draft. Many thanks also to Akif Saifi and Mally Anderson for all her help and to Scott Moyers (Penguin), who seamlessly took over from Colin Dickerman. And a greatly appreciative bow to Katherine Ailes (The Bodley Head), particularly for all her efforts in securing such a stunning set of images to adorn these pages and bring the words alive. Thanks too to Maria Garbutt-Lucero and Will Smith (The Bodley Head) and Samantha Choy Park, Sarah Hutson, and Tracy Locke (Penguin) for your help with the publicity and marketing of the book.
The subject matter of this book is very eclectic, and has taken me far beyond the horizons of my own academic field of expertise. Conducting the research has brought me into contact with a hugely diverse range of people, and I have been constantly warmed by the extent to which people will go in offering their time and effort to help a stranger. These contributions have been utterly invaluable and include: replying to an out-of-the-blue e-mail with useful information and tip-offs of what else to look into; agreeing to be subjected to me picking their brains with a toddler-like series of whys, whats, and hows; helping with illustrations or reading through draft chapters to check for howlers; and generously spending hours sitting down with me and explaining slowly (and repeatedly!) the details and history of their own specialties. So a deep and heartfelt thank you to:
Paul Abel, Jon Agar, Richard Alston, Stephen Baxter, Alice Bell, John Bingham, John Blair, Keith Branigan, Alan Brown, Mike Bullivant, Donal Casey, Andrew Chapple, Jonathan Cowie, Thomas Crump, Sam Davey, John Davis, Oliver de Peyer, Klaus Dodds, Julian Evans, Ben Fields, Steve Finch, Craig Gershater, Vince Gingery, Vinay Gupta, Rick Hamilton, Vincent Hamlyn, Colin Harding, Andy Hart, Rebekah Higgitt, Tim Hunkin, Alex Karalis Isaac, Richard Jones, Jason Kim, James Kneale, Roger Kneebone, Monika Koperska, Nancy Korman, Paul Lambert, Simon Lang, Marco Langbroek, Pete Lawrence, Andrew Mason, Gordon Masterton, Rich Maynard, Steve Miller, Mark Miodownik, John Mitchell, Ginny Moore, Terry Moore, Francisco Morcillo, James Mursell, Jheni Osman, Sam Pinney, David Pryor, Antony Quarrell, Noah Raford, Peter Ransom, Carole Reeves, Alby Reid, Alexander Rose, Steven Rose, Andrew Russell, Tim Sammons, Andrea Sella, Anita Seyani, James Sherwin-Smith, Tony Sizer, William Slaton, Simon Smallwood, Frank Swain, Stefan Szczelkun, Ian Thornton, Thomas Thwaites, Phiroze Vasunia, Alex Wakeford, Mike Ware, Simon Watson, Andrew Wear, Kathy Whalen Moss, Sophie Willett, Emma Williams, Andrew Wilson, Peter Wilson, Lofty Wiseman, and Marek Ziebart.
If civilization ever does go belly-up, I would feel privileged to have any of you on my post-apocalyptic survival team!
Thank you to Max Richter, Arvo Pärt, Godspeed You! Black Emperor, M83, Tom Waits, Kate Rusby, and Jon Boden (your
Songs from the Floodplain
is quite possibly the best post-apocalyptic folk album in the genre . . .) for providing the soundtrack within my work bubble, and Nor and Fat Cat cafés for putting up with my long hours of mocha mainlining and lip-chewing while writing. Your pork belly sandwiches are the pinnacle of civilized society.
Thank you too to my family and friends who have smilingly endured my repetitive dinner table and pub chat on post-apocalyptic matters, or humored me on research adventures. The final and most important thanks are, of course, to my wonderful wife. Vicky has stoically supported me through this long process, quietly tolerating the many weekends lost to a grouchy husband hunched over the laptop and effortlessly picking up my mood after an evening home alone “doing background research” from bleak post-apocalyptic films and novels.
The page numbers in this index refer to the printed version of this book. The link provided will take you to the beginning of that print page. You may need to scroll forward from that location to find the corresponding reference on your e-reader.
Page numbers in
italics
refer to illustrations.
acetylene,
131
acids,
82
,
84
,
92
,
104
,
113
,
116
,
120
–22
agriculture,
52
,
53
–77,
247
–48,
253
,
265
,
274
,
275
–76
fertilizers for,
57
,
58
,
69
,
70
,
72
,
73
,
76
,
77
n,
110
,
121
,
237
,
238
,
247
–48,
250
,
278
–79
handheld tools for,
60
,
61
,
67
,
68
herbicides and pesticides in,
57
,
77
n,
279
manure for,
61
,
69
,
70
,
73
–76,
237
,
243
,
247
,
250
Norfolk four-course rotation in,
69
–73
principles of,
56
–58
Alas, Babylon
(Frank),
165
in gasoline,
189
–90
Alkali Act,
244
n
alkalis,
82
,
84
,
104
,
113
,
114
,
116
,
120
,
212
,
234
,
243
aluminum,
115
n,
132
,
133
,
174
n,
232
–33
ammonia,
94
,
115
,
120
,
159
,
240
n,
245
,
246
,
247
,
249
,
250
ammonium bicarbonate,
245
analgesia,
155
–57
anesthesia,
158
–59
antifreeze,
119
antifungals,
155
antimalarials,
155
animals:
antivirals,
147
Apollo program,
8
arc furnace,
132
arc lamp,
178
argon,
178
asepsis,
158
Asimov, Isaac,
162
aspirin,
157
atmospheric pressure,
284
–85
atomic hypothesis,
9
–10
atoms,
279
Atwood, Margaret,
103
bacteria,
160
Baghdad battery,
175
barium,
233
barley,
55
,
60
,
66
,
67
,
71
–73,
86
,
89
,
90
batteries,
47
–48,
174
–77,
183
,
207
,
266
Baghdad,
175
Beagle,
HMS,
272
n
Bessemer converter,
137
–38
biofuels,
74
–75,
119
,
191
,
206
–7,
208
Black Death,
23
blood pressure cuff,
152
bone meal,
75
–76
printing press for,
12
–13,
215
–19
boron,
233
bricks,
124
–27
bridges,
29
Britain,
77
n
bromine,
241
Brush, Charles Francis,
179
–80,
179
buildings,
28
–30
apartment,
44
–45
butane,
191
butter,
85
buttons,
100
–101
Caesar, Julius,
261
n
hydroxide (slaked lime; limewater),
111
,
112
,
115
,
120
,
127
,
212
,
237
hypochlorite,
212
oxide (quicklime),
110
–12,
139
,
140
,
233
,
245
sulfide,
244
n
Canticle for Leibowitz, A
(Miller),
123
capsaicin,
155
–56
monoxide,
193
carbon-black pigments,
219
cars,
41
–42
alternators in,
46
–47
electric,
206
–7
motors in,
173
catalytic converter,
250
cathode rays,
152
–53
caustic soda (sodium hydroxide),
115
,
190
,
212
,
232
,
233
,
234
,
243
,
244
,
244
n
Celsius scale,
286
cement,
127
–28
cereal crops:
preparation of,
86
–91
Cesarean section,
149
charcoal,
106
–7,
116
,
124
,
135
,
184
cheese,
85
see also
substances
chemistry,
231
–51
electrolysis,
212
,
232
–33,
234
,
249
explosives,
104
,
110
,
116
,
118
,
122
,
235
–38,
242
,
247
,
250
glass equipment for,
142
inorganic,
278
–79
organic,
279
photography,
see
photography
reversible and unidirectional reactions in,
249
Chicago, Ill.,
28
childbirth and neonatal care,
149
–50
cholera,
148
chronometers,
272
n
cinchona,
155
cities:
cannibalizing,
49
–52
Clarke, Arthur C.,
4
cliché,
218
n
clothing,
34
clothing production,
95
–102
fabrics for,
98
–101
fasteners for,
100
–101
clutch,
204
codeine,
156
cold, common,
147
collagen,
116
collodion process,
241
combined heat and power (CHP) plants,
185
,
207
paper for,
210
–13,
215
,
218
,
232
,
243
,
276
printing press for,
12
–13,
215
–19
radio,
see
radio
telegraph,
220
–21
compost,
74
compressed natural gas (CNG),
191
computers,
230
continental drift,
279
copper acetate,
118
cordite,
118
corn (maize),
53
–54,
66
,
67
,
84
n,
86
Coupland, Douglas,
231
crank,
171
,
171
,
173
,
200
,
202
–3,
204
cream of tartar,
226
crime and violence,
20
–22
Crookes, William,
248
cross-flow turbine,
181
–82
Dahl, Roald,
176
Danny, the Champion of the World
(Dahl),
187
Darwin, Charles,
272
n
Da Vinci effect,
14
Day of the Triffids, The
(Wyndham),
53
dead reckoning,
270
Defoe, Daniel,
33
Design that Matters,
150