- locust bird (common name of several birds)
locust bird, any of various African birds that eat grasshoppers and locusts, especially the black-winged pratincole (see pratincole). In India the rose-coloured starling is called locust
- locust borer (insect)
long-horned beetle: Another cerambycid is the locust borer (Megacyllene robiniae), which is black with yellow stripes across the body. Female locust borers lay their eggs in black locust trees. After the larvae hatch, they bore into the inner bark of the tree, creating tunnels and leaving the tree susceptible to damaging…
- Locust Grove (landmark, New York, United States)
Samuel F.B. Morse: By 1847 Morse had bought Locust Grove, an estate overlooking the Hudson River near Poughkeepsie, New York, where, early in the 1850s, he built an Italian villa-style mansion. He spent his summers there with his large family of children and grandchildren, returning each winter season to his brownstone home in…
- Locust Street Social Settlement (settlement house, Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Janie Porter Barrett: …was formally organized as the Locust Street Social Settlement, the nation’s first settlement house for African-Americans. In 1902 she and her husband built a separate structure on their property to house the settlement’s numerous activities, which included clubs, classes in domestic skills, and recreation; many of these activities were funded…
- Locusta (Roman murderer)
serial murder: History: …the earliest documented cases involved Locusta, a Roman woman hired by Agrippina the Younger, the mother of Nero, to poison several members of the imperial family; Locusta was executed in 69 ce. Serial murders also were documented in medieval England, Germany, Hungary, and Italy. The French baron Gilles de Rais,…
- Locusta migratoria (insect)
insect: Damage to growing crops: …desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria) and migratory locust (Locusta migratoria) are two examples of this type of life cycle.
- Locustidae (insect)
short-horned grasshopper, (family Acrididae), any of more than 10,000 species of insects (order Orthoptera) that are characterized by short, heavy antennae, a four-valved ovipositor for laying eggs, and three-segmented tarsi (distal segments of the leg). They are herbivorous and include some of the
- Lod (Israel)
Lod, city, central Israel, on the Plain of Sharon southeast of Tel Aviv–Yafo. Of ancient origin, it is mentioned several times in the Bible: in a New Testament account (Acts 9:32), the apostle Peter healed the paralytic at Lod. The city was a well-known center of Jewish scholars and merchants from
- Loddon River (river, Australia)
Loddon River, river, central Victoria, Australia, rising in the Eastern Highlands 50 miles (80 km) northwest of Melbourne and flowing northwest and north for more than 200 miles (320 km), past Kerang, joining with the Little Murray and then with the Murray near Swan Hill. Inconstant in volume, the
- lode (ore deposit)
vein, in geology, ore body that is disseminated within definite boundaries in unwanted rock or minerals (gangue). The term, as used by geologists, is nearly synonymous with the term lode, as used by miners. There are two distinct types: fissure veins and ladder veins. Fissure veins, the earliest
- loden cloth (textile)
fulling: A common example is loden cloth, first produced in Austria in the 16th century. See also felting.
- loden coat (garment)
loden coat, jacket of Tyrolean origin, made of loden cloth, which was first handwoven by peasants living in Loderers, Austria, in the 16th century. The material comes from the coarse, oily wool of mountain sheep and is thick, soft, and waterproof. Loden cloth is dyed in several colours, but bluish
- lodestone (mineral)
magnetite, iron oxide mineral (FeFe2O4, or Fe3O4) that is the chief member of one of the series of the spinel (q.v.) group. Minerals in this series form black to brownish, metallic, moderately hard octahedrons and masses in igneous and metamorphic rocks and in granite pegmatites, stony meteorites,
- Lodewijk van Nassau (Dutch political leader)
Louis of Nassau was a nobleman who provided key military and political leadership in the early phases (1566–74) of the Netherlands’ revolt against Spanish rule and who served as a valued ally of his older brother William, Prince of Orange (William I the Silent). A Lutheran from birth, Louis lived
- lodge (dwelling)
lodge, originally an insubstantial house or dwelling, erected as a seasonal habitation or for some temporary occupational purpose, such as woodcutting. In this sense the word is currently used to describe accommodations for sportsmen during hunting season and for recreationists, such as skiers. The
- Lodge, David (British author, editor, and critic)
David Lodge is an English novelist, literary critic, playwright, and editor known chiefly for his satiric novels about academic life. Lodge was educated at University College, London (B.A., 1955; M.A., 1959), and at the University of Birmingham (Ph.D., 1967). His early novels, known mostly in
- Lodge, David John (British author, editor, and critic)
David Lodge is an English novelist, literary critic, playwright, and editor known chiefly for his satiric novels about academic life. Lodge was educated at University College, London (B.A., 1955; M.A., 1959), and at the University of Birmingham (Ph.D., 1967). His early novels, known mostly in
- Lodge, Henry Cabot (United States senator [1902–1985])
Henry Cabot Lodge was a U.S. senator and diplomat who ran unsuccessfully for the vice presidency of the United States in 1960. He was the grandson of Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge (1850–1924) and a member of a politically dedicated family that included six U.S. senators and a governor of Massachusetts.
- Lodge, Henry Cabot (United States senator [1850-1924])
Henry Cabot Lodge was a Republican U.S. senator for more than 31 years (1893–1924); he led the successful congressional opposition to his country’s participation in the League of Nations following World War I. In 1876 Lodge was one of the first to be granted a doctorate in history from Harvard
- Lodge, John (British musician)
the Moody Blues: …14, 1946, Swindon, Wiltshire, England), John Lodge (b. July 20, 1945, Birmingham), and Patrick Moraz (b. June 24, 1948, Morges, Switzerland).
- Lodge, Sir Oliver Joseph (British physicist)
Sir Oliver Joseph Lodge was a British physicist who perfected the coherer, a radio-wave detector and the heart of the early radiotelegraph receiver. Lodge became assistant professor of applied mathematics at University College, London, in 1879 and was appointed to the chair of physics at University
- Lodge, Thomas (English writer)
Thomas Lodge was an English poet, dramatist, and prose writer whose innovative versatility typified the Elizabethan Age. He is best remembered for the prose romance Rosalynde, the source of William Shakespeare’s As You Like It. He was the son of Sir Thomas Lodge, who was lord mayor of London in
- Lodge-Philbin Act (United States [1950])
Aaron Bank: …who had enlisted under the Lodge-Philbin Act, a 1950 law that offered U.S. citizenship to eastern European immigrants in exchange for military service.
- lodgepole pine (tree)
tree: Tree height growth: Some species, such as lodgepole pine (Pinus contorta), are polycyclic; they have several flushes from a single bud during the growing season.
- Lodger (album by Bowie)
David Bowie: …its sequels, “Heroes” (1977) and Lodger (1979), would prove to be Bowie’s most influential and lasting, serving as a blueprint for a later generation of techno-rock. In the short run, they marked the end of his significant mass audience impact, though not his sales—thanks mostly to Rodgers.
- Lodger, The (work by Lowndes)
Marie Adelaide Lowndes: The Lodger, published the following year, was a fictional treatment of the Jack the Ripper murders. Her numerous works, spanning the first 40 years of the 20th century, include a series featuring the detective Hercules Popeau and an autobiography, “I, Too, Have Lived in Arcadia”…
- Lodger: A Story of the London Fog, The (film by Hitchcock [1927])
Alfred Hitchcock: First films: But it was The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1927) that both he and students of the cinema would come to regard as his first “real” work—and one that very much drew on his youthful surroundings. Adapted from a popular novel by Marie Belloc Lowndes, the…
- lodgment till (geology)
glacial landform: Glacial deposition: …type of deposit is called lodgment till. By definition, till is any material laid down directly or reworked by a glacier. Typically, it is a mixture of rock fragments and boulders in a fine-grained sandy or muddy matrix (non-stratified drift). The exact composition of any particular till, however, depends on…
- Lodi (California, United States)
Lodi, city, San Joaquin county, central California, U.S. Lodi lies along the Mokelumne River at the junction of the San Joaquin and Sacramento valleys just northeast of Stockton, on the edge of the Sacramento River delta. It originated as Mokelumne Station (1869) on the Central Pacific (later part
- Lodi (Italy)
Lodi, town, Lombardia (Lombardy) regione, northern Italy. It lies on the right bank of the Adda River, southeast of Milan. The original settlement (5th century bc) on the site of the present suburb of Lodi Vecchio obtained Roman citizenship in 89 bc as Laus Pompeia. Destroyed in the communal
- Lodī dynasty (Indian history)
Lodī dynasty, (1451–1526), last ruling family of the Delhi sultanate of India. The dynasty was of Afghan origin. The first Lodī ruler was Bahlūl Lodī (reigned 1451–89), the most powerful of the Punjab chiefs, who replaced the last king of the Sayyid dynasty in 1451. Bahlūl was a vigorous leader,
- Lodi, Battle of (Italian history [1796])
Battle of Lodi, (May 10, 1796), small but dramatic engagement in Napoleon Bonaparte’s first Italian campaign, in which he earned the confidence and loyalty of his men, who nicknamed him “The Little Corporal” in recognition of his personal courage. (See “Napoleon’s Major Battles” Interactive Map)
- Lodi, Peace of (Europe [1454])
Peace of Lodi, (April 9, 1454), treaty between Venice and Milan ending the war of succession to the Milanese duchy in favour of Francesco Sforza. It marked the beginning of a 40-year period of relative peace, during which power was balanced among the five states that dominated the Italian
- lodicule (plant anatomy)
Poaceae: Characteristic morphological features: …there are translucent structures called lodicules. They are two or three (rarely none or up to six) in number and too small to be seen well without magnification. They vary in shape, but all function similarly in that they swell rapidly when the flower is mature and force apart the…
- Lodoicea maldivica (plant)
coco de mer, (Lodoicea maldivica), native palm of the Seychelles Islands in the Indian Ocean. The flowers are borne in enormous fleshy spadices (spikes), the male and female on distinct plants. Coco de mer fruits, among the largest known, take about 10 years to ripen; they have a fleshy and fibrous
- Lodoïska (opera by Cherubini)
Luigi Cherubini: …inaugurated his new style was Lodoïska (1791). It moved away from the emphasis on the solo voice found in opera seria to give new scope to ensembles and choruses and a fresh dramatic importance to the orchestra. He thus forged a link between the older style and the grand opera…
- Lodoli, Carlo (Italian critic)
Western architecture: Italy: …of pure theory, a Venetian, Carlo Lodoli, was an important early advocate of Functionalism. His ideas are known through the writings of Francesco Algarotti, including the Saggio sopra l’architettura (1753) and Lettere sopra l’architettura (beginning 1742). Lodoli’s theories were similar to those of Laugier, requiring that every part of a…
- Lodore (novel by Shelley)
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley: …Fortunes of Perkin Warbeck (1830), Lodore (1835), and Falkner (1837); The Last Man (1826), an account of the future destruction of the human race by a plague, is often ranked as her best work. Her travel book History of a Six Weeks’ Tour (1817) recounts the continental tour she and…
- Łódź (Poland)
Łódź, city, capital of Łódzkie województwo (province), central Poland. It lies on the northwestern edge of the Łódź Highlands, on the watershed of the Vistula and Oder rivers, 81 miles (130 km) southwest of Warsaw. Łódź is mentioned in 14th-century records as a village. It acquired municipal rights
- Łódzkie (province, Poland)
Łódzkie, województwo (province), central Poland. It is bordered by six provinces: Kujawsko-Pomorskie to the north, Mazowieckie to the east, Świętokrzyskie to the southeast, Śląskie to the south, Opolskie to the southwest, and Wielkopolskie to the west. It was formed in 1999—when the 49 provinces
- Loe, Thomas (British minister)
William Penn: Early life and education: In Ireland William heard Thomas Loe, a Quaker itinerant, preach to his family at the admiral’s invitation, an experience that apparently intensified his religious feelings. In 1660 William entered the University of Oxford, where he rejected Anglicanism and was expelled in 1662 for his religious Nonconformity. Determined to thwart…
- Loeb Peretz, Isaac (Polish-Jewish writer)
I.L. Peretz was a prolific writer of poems, short stories, drama, humorous sketches, and satire who was instrumental in raising the standard of Yiddish literature to a high level. Peretz began writing in Hebrew but soon turned to Yiddish. For his tales, he drew material from the lives of
- Loeb, Jacques (German biologist)
Jacques Loeb was a German-born American biologist noted chiefly for his experimental work on artificial parthenogenesis (reproduction without fertilization). Having received an M.D. degree from the University of Strasbourg (1884), Loeb began work in biology at the University of Würzburg (1886–88)
- Loeb, Richard A. (American murderer)
Leopold and Loeb: The murderers and their victim: Loeb also attended the University of Michigan, and he graduated at 17, following with postgraduate work at the University of Chicago. Leopold was the more scholarly of the two—an amateur ornithologist and linguist who spoke multiple languages—while Loeb was considered more social. Having attended separate…
- Loeb, Sébastien (French race-car driver)
Sébastien Loeb is a French race-car driver who was widely considered to be the greatest rally racer of all time, having won a record nine World Rally Championship (WRC) titles (2004–12). After winning five gold medals at the French national gymnastics championships by the time he was 15, Loeb
- Loebbe plow (mining machinery)
coal mining: Origins of longwall mining: …the “plow” was developed by Wilhelm Loebbe of Germany. Pulled across the face of the coal and guided by a pipe on the face side of a segmented conveyor, the plow carved a gash off the bottom of the seam. The conveyor snaked against the face behind the advancing plow…
- Loeber, Freda (German businesswoman)
Freda Ehmann was a German businesswoman known as the “mother of the California ripe olive industry” for her contributions to the olive industry in the late 19th century. Ehmann made her mark late in life. At age 56 she was poor and recently widowed. Her only asset was a 20-acre (8-hectare) orchard
- Loeffler, Charles Martin (American composer)
Charles Martin Loeffler was an American composer whose works are distinguished by a poetic lyricism in an Impressionist style. As a youth, Loeffler studied violin and music theory in Berlin and Paris. He went to the United States in 1881 and joined the Boston Symphony Orchestra as a violinist the
- Loeffler, Charles Martin Tornow (American composer)
Charles Martin Loeffler was an American composer whose works are distinguished by a poetic lyricism in an Impressionist style. As a youth, Loeffler studied violin and music theory in Berlin and Paris. He went to the United States in 1881 and joined the Boston Symphony Orchestra as a violinist the
- Loeffler, Kelly (American businesswoman and politician)
Raphael Warnock: A politician’s life: Georgia businesswoman Kelly Loeffler, a Republican, was appointed to replace Isakson until a special election could be held in November 2020 to fill the remaining two years of Isakson’s term. Warnock entered the race in a field of what would ultimately become more than 20 candidates. In…
- Loeffler, Kelly Lynn (American businesswoman and politician)
Raphael Warnock: A politician’s life: Georgia businesswoman Kelly Loeffler, a Republican, was appointed to replace Isakson until a special election could be held in November 2020 to fill the remaining two years of Isakson’s term. Warnock entered the race in a field of what would ultimately become more than 20 candidates. In…
- loellingite (mineral)
loellingite, an iron arsenide mineral (FeAs2) that usually occurs with iron and copper sulfides in hydrothermal vein deposits. It typically occurs with impurities of cobalt, nickel, and arsenic—as at the Andreas-Berg, in the Ore Mountains (Erzgebirge) of Germany; Andalusia, Spain; and Franklin, New
- loess (sedimentary deposit)
loess, an unstratified, geologically recent deposit of silty or loamy material that is usually buff or yellowish brown in colour and is chiefly deposited by the wind. Loess is a sedimentary deposit composed largely of silt-size grains that are loosely cemented by calcium carbonate. It is usually
- Loess Plateau (plateau, China)
Loess Plateau, highland area in north-central China, covering much of Shanxi, northern Henan, Shaanxi, and eastern Gansu provinces and the middle part of the Huang He (Yellow River) basin. Averaging about 4,000 feet (1,200 metres) in elevation and covering some 154,000 square miles (400,000 square
- Loesser, Frank (American composer and lyricist)
Frank Loesser was an American composer, librettist, and lyricist, who achieved major success writing for Broadway musicals, culminating in the 1962 Pulitzer Prize-winning How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. Self-taught despite his piano-teacher father’s efforts to discourage his
- Loesser, Frank Henry (American composer and lyricist)
Frank Loesser was an American composer, librettist, and lyricist, who achieved major success writing for Broadway musicals, culminating in the 1962 Pulitzer Prize-winning How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. Self-taught despite his piano-teacher father’s efforts to discourage his
- Loew, Marcus (American executive)
Marcus Loew was an American motion-picture executive and pioneer motion-picture theatre owner whose consolidation and expansion of his business interests helped establish Hollywood as the centre of the film industry. Loew was the son of an Austrian immigrant and left school at the age of nine to
- Loewe v. Lawlor (208 U.S. 274) (law case, United States)
Danbury Hatters’ Case, U.S. Supreme Court case in which unions were held to be subject to the antitrust laws. In 1902 the United Hatters of North America, having failed to organize the firm of D.E. Loewe in Danbury, Conn., called for a nationwide boycott of the firm’s products. The firm brought
- Loewe, Carl (German composer)
Carl Loewe was a German composer and singer who is best-known for his songs, particularly his dramatic ballads. Loewe began to compose while still a choirboy in Köthen and completed his musical training in Halle. He frequently toured Europe singing his songs with great success, and in Vienna he was
- Loewe, Frederick (American composer)
Frederick Loewe was a German-born American composer and collaborator with Alan Jay Lerner on a series of hit musical plays, including the phenomenally successful My Fair Lady (1956; filmed 1964). Loewe, whose father was a Viennese actor and operetta tenor, was a child prodigy, playing the piano at
- Loewe, H. (Jewish scholar)
Claude Joseph Goldsmid Montefiore: …collaborated with the Orthodox scholar, H. Loewe, in editing A Rabbinic Anthology. This work is doubly remarkable because Reform Jews deny the authority of the Talmud, the rabbinical compendium of law, lore, and commentary. In the Anthology, Montefiore attempts to dispel the notion that Christianity developed a completely new and…
- Loewe, Johann Carl Gottfried (German composer)
Carl Loewe was a German composer and singer who is best-known for his songs, particularly his dramatic ballads. Loewe began to compose while still a choirboy in Köthen and completed his musical training in Halle. He frequently toured Europe singing his songs with great success, and in Vienna he was
- Loewenstein, László (Hungarian-American actor)
Peter Lorre was a Hungarian-born American motion-picture actor who projected a sinister image as a lisping, round-faced, soft-voiced villain in thrillers. A player of bit parts with a German theatrical troupe from 1921, Lorre achieved international fame as the psychotic child murderer in the German
- Loewi, Otto (German-American pharmacologist)
Otto Loewi was a German-born American physician and pharmacologist who, with Sir Henry Dale, received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1936 for their discoveries relating to the chemical transmission of nerve impulses. After Loewi graduated in medicine (1896) from the German University
- Loewy, Raymond (American industrial designer)
Raymond Loewy was a French-born American industrial designer who, through his accomplishments in product design beginning in the 1930s, helped to establish industrial design as a profession. Loewy studied electrical engineering at the University of Paris, graduating in 1910. His studies in advanced
- Loewy, Raymond Fernand (American industrial designer)
Raymond Loewy was a French-born American industrial designer who, through his accomplishments in product design beginning in the 1930s, helped to establish industrial design as a profession. Loewy studied electrical engineering at the University of Paris, graduating in 1910. His studies in advanced
- Loewy, Salomon (Austrian composer)
Salomon Sulzer was an Austrian Jewish cantor, considered the most important composer of synagogue music in the 19th century. Sulzer was trained in cantorial singing from childhood, studying in Austria and Switzerland and travelling in France. In 1820 he was appointed cantor at Hohenems and served
- Löffler, Friedrich August Johannes (German bacteriologist)
Friedrich August Johannes Löffler was a German bacteriologist who, with Edwin Klebs, in 1884 discovered the organism that causes diphtheria, Corynebacterium diphtheriae, commonly known as the Klebs-Löffler bacillus. Simultaneously with Émile Roux and Alexandre Yersin, he indicated the existence of
- Lofgren, Nils (American musician)
Bruce Springsteen: Without The Big Man: …Bittan, bassist Garry Tallent, guitarist Nils Lofgren, vocalist Patti Scialfa (Springsteen’s wife), and two former E Street Band band members, pianist David Sancious and drummer Vini Lopez—were selected in 2013 for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as members of the E Street Band.
- lofi music
lo-fi music, genre of music production in which a recording is intentionally rendered to include imperfections, such as harmonic distortion, background noise, or other anomalous sounds. Such irregularities are normally filtered out of professional recordings, since they generally are undesirable.
- Lofoten (islands, North Sea)
Lofoten, island group, in the Norwegian Sea, northern Norway. Lying off the mainland entirely within the Arctic Circle, the group comprises the southern end of the Lofoten-Vesterålen archipelago and includes five main islands (Austvågøya, Gimsøya, Vestvågøya, Flakstadøya, and Moskenesøya) extending
- loft (architecture)
loft, in architecture, upper space within a building, or a large undivided space in a building used principally for storage in business or industry. In churches the rood loft is a display gallery above the rood screen, and a choir or organ loft is a gallery reserved for church singers and
- lofted shot (cricket)
cricket: Technical development: …no fielders there) and the lofted shot (where the batsman tries to hit the ball past the fielders and over their heads). Twenty20 (T20), a style of one-day cricket consisting of 20 overs per side, debuted in 2003 and quickly became an international sensation. The first Twenty20 world championship was…
- Lofthuus, Christian Jensen (Norwegian peasant leader)
Christian Jensen Lofthuus was a leader of a reform movement who sought redress for the grievances of Norway’s peasantry from the absolutist Danish-Norwegian government. His imprisonment and death made him a martyr for Norwegian agrarian reform. Lofthuus first journeyed to Denmark in June 1786 to
- Lofting, Hugh (British-American author)
Hugh Lofting was an English-born American author of a series of children’s classics about Dr. Dolittle, a chubby, gentle, eccentric physician to animals, who learns the language of animals from his parrot, Polynesia, so that he can treat their complaints more efficiently. Much of the wit and charm
- Lofton, Martha Euphemia (American educator and mathematician)
Euphemia Lofton Haynes was an American educator and mathematician who was the first African American woman to receive a doctoral degree in mathematics. Lofton was born into a socially prominent African American family. Her father, William, was a dentist, and her mother, Lavinia, was a kindergarten
- Lofton, Ramona (American author)
Sapphire is an American author of fiction and poetry that features unsparing though often empowering depictions of the vicissitudes of African American and bisexual life. Lofton, whose father was a U.S. Army sergeant and whose mother was a member of the Women’s Army Corps (WAC), spent portions of
- Loftus, William Kenneth (British archaeologist)
Susa: Loftus, consists of four mounds. One held the citadel and was excavated (1897–1908) by Jacques de Morgan, who uncovered, among other objects, the obelisk of the Akkadian king Manishtusu, the stele of his successor Naram-Sin, and the code of Hammurabi of Babylon. A second mound…
- Löfven, Stefan (prime minister of Sweden)
Stefan Löfven is a Swedish labour leader and Social Democratic politician who served as prime minister of Sweden (2014–21). Löfven grew up as foster child in a working-class family in Ådalen, Västernorrland, in northeastern Sweden. He studied social work at Umeå University for a year and a half and
- log (wood)
road: The Amber Routes: …two or three strings of logs in the direction of the road on a bed of branches and boughs up to 20 feet (6 metres) wide. This layer was then covered with a layer of transverse logs 9 to 12 feet in length laid side by side. In the best…
- log (nautical instrument)
log, instrument for measuring the speed of a ship through water. The first practical log, developed about 1600, consisted of a pie-shaped log chip with a lead weight on its curved edge that caused it to float upright and resist towing. When the log was tossed overboard, it remained more or less
- log (ancient unit of measurement)
measurement system: The Babylonians: gallons); if so, the log equaled slightly more than 0.5 litre (0.14 U.S. gallon), and the hin slightly more than 6 litres (1.6 U.S. gallons). The Hebrew system was notable for the close relationship between dry and liquid volumetric measures; the liquid kor was the same size as the…
- log cabin (building)
log cabin, small house built of logs notched at the ends and laid one upon another with the spaces filled with plaster, moss, mortar, mud, or dried manure. Log cabins are found especially in wooded areas, where the construction material is easily at hand. In North America they were built by early
- log fern (fern genus)
shield fern, any of about 250 species of the fern genus Dryopteris, in the family Dryopteridaceae, with worldwide distribution. Shield ferns are medium-sized woodland plants with bright green, leathery leaves that are several times divided. They have numerous round spore clusters (sori) attached
- log glass (time-measuring device)
hourglass, an early device for measuring intervals of time. It is also known as a sandglass or a log glass when used in conjunction with the common log for ascertaining the speed of a ship. It consists of two pear-shaped bulbs of glass, united at their apexes and having a minute passage formed
- log line (surveying)
surveying: History: …Greeks used a form of log line for recording the distances run from point to point along the coast while making their slow voyages from the Indus to the Persian Gulf about 325 bce. The magnetic compass was brought to the West by Arab traders in the 12th century ce.…
- log phase (biology)
bacteria: Growth of bacterial populations: The population then enters the log phase, in which cell numbers increase in a logarithmic fashion, and each cell generation occurs in the same time interval as the preceding ones, resulting in a balanced increase in the constituents of each cell. The log phase continues until nutrients are depleted or…
- log road
road: The Amber Routes: A few remnants of these roads survive today. They were constructed by laying two or three strings of logs in the direction of the road on a bed of branches and boughs up to 20 feet (6 metres) wide. This layer was then covered with a layer of transverse logs…
- log-log slide rule (mathematics)
Peter Mark Roget: …1814 he invented a “log-log” slide rule for calculating the roots and powers of numbers. From 1808 to 1840 he practiced in London. The first edition of the Thesaurus, which was begun in his 61st year and finished in his 73rd, was a product of his retirement from active medical…
- Logan (Utah, United States)
Logan, city, seat (1859) of Cache county, northern Utah, U.S. It lies along the Logan River (named for Ephraim Logan, a trapper), in the Cache Valley, 35 miles (56 km) north-northeast of Ogden. The city is built on terraces of prehistoric Lake Bonneville at the mouth of Logan Canyon, 4,535 feet
- Logan (West Virginia, United States)
Logan, city, seat (1826) of Logan county, southwestern West Virginia, U.S. It lies along the Guyandotte River, about 40 miles (64 km) southwest of Charleston, near the Kentucky border. Laid out in 1824 and known as Lawnsville, it was chartered in 1852 and renamed Aracoma for the eldest daughter of
- Logan (film by Mangold [2017])
Hugh Jackman: In 2017 Jackman starred in Logan, the 10th film in which he appeared as Wolverine, and later that year he portrayed P.T. Barnum in the musical The Greatest Showman. He then starred in The Front Runner (2018), the true story of former U.S. senator Gary Hart, whose 1988 presidential bid…
- Logan Act (United States [1799])
Logan Act, legislation enacted by the United States Congress (1799) that forbids private citizens from engaging in unauthorized correspondence with foreign governments. As amended, the act reads: During the 1790s tensions were high between the United States and France. In 1778 France had formally
- Logan Lucky (film by Soderbergh [2017])
Daniel Craig: …in Steven Soderbergh’s comedy heist Logan Lucky and portrayed the neighbour and love interest of a foster mother living in Los Angeles during the riots of 1992 in Kings. In the comedic whodunit Knives Out (2019), he was cast as a detective investigating the death of a mystery writer; he…
- Logan Stone (poetry by Thomas)
D.M. Thomas: In his first poetry collection, Logan Stone (1971), he explored subjects that ranged from eroticism to science fiction to his native Cornwall, all of which became common themes of his work. His later collections, including The Shaft (1973), Love and Other Deaths (1975), and The Honeymoon Voyage (1978), won praise…
- Logan’s Fault (geological feature, North America)
Logan’s Line, in geology, prominent zone of thrust faulting in northeastern and eastern North America related to the culmination of the Taconic orogeny during the Ordovician Period (488.3 million to 443.7 million years ago). The zone parallels the coast of Newfoundland, follows the St. Lawrence
- Logan’s Line (geological feature, North America)
Logan’s Line, in geology, prominent zone of thrust faulting in northeastern and eastern North America related to the culmination of the Taconic orogeny during the Ordovician Period (488.3 million to 443.7 million years ago). The zone parallels the coast of Newfoundland, follows the St. Lawrence
- Logan, Harvey (American outlaw)
Kid Curry was an American gunslinger who became notorious as the most quick-tempered killer of the Wild Bunch, a group of Western outlaws. His brothers, Lonny and Johnny, also gained reputations as Western badmen, as did their uncle, George Sutherland (“Flat Nose”) Curry. Kid Curry, primarily a
- Logan, James (British-American colonial statesman)
James Logan was a British-American colonial statesman and merchant who was also prominent in British-colonial intellectual life. After receiving instruction in classical and modern languages from his schoolmaster father, Logan worked in commerce in Bristol, Eng., prior to becoming secretary to
- Logan, James (American Indian leader)
James Logan was a prominent Indian leader, whose initial excellent relations with white settlers in Pennsylvania and the Ohio Territory deteriorated into a vendetta after the slaughter of his family in 1774. Logan’s mother was a Cayuga Indian; his father was Chief Shikellamy, who was purportedly a