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Robert Williams Wood
Robert Williams Wood (1868–1955) was an American experimental physicist and writer, known for his pioneering work in optics and ultraviolet photography. He is famous for developing the "Wood's glass," a type of ultraviolet glass, and making significant contributions to infrared and ultraviolet photography. Wood also wrote scientific texts as well as satirical works, including "How to Tell the Birds from the Flowers," a humorous book that combines poetry and whimsical illustrations. His research greatly influenced the fields of spectroscopy and experimental physics.
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By other Nature books I'm sure, You've often been misled, You've tried a wall-flower to secure. And "picked a hen" instead: You've wondered what the egg-plants lay, And why the chestnut's burred, And if the hop-vine hops away, It's perfectly absurd. I hence submit for your inspection, This very new and choice collection, Of flowers on Storks, and Phlox of birds,...
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Burr. Bird. The Bird and the Burdock. Who is there who has never heard, About the Burdock and the Bird? And yet how very very few, Discriminate between the two, While even Mr. Burbank can't Transform a Bird into a Plant! The Plover and the Clover can be told apart with ease, By paying close attention to the habits of the Bees, For en-to-molo-gists aver, the Bee can be in Clover, While...
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