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Cornell University cold fusion archive, 1989-1993.
This archive was created by the active intervention of researchers and was collected with the support of the National Science Foundation as a resource for historians, sociologists, and other researchers interested in the saga of cold fusion. The archive consists of four major types of information: original manuscript and published materials produced by principles in cold fusion; mass media articles about cold fusion, including newspapers, magazines, books, radio broadcasts, and television broadcasts consisting of original clippings, off-the-air recordings, computer printouts, digital camera cassettes, and transcripts; taped interviews with researchers, research administrators, public information representatives, and journalists involved in cold fusion; and items of material culture.
In March 1989, researchers at two universities in Utah separately announced that they had created nuclear fusion at room temperatures. The resulting furor generated hundreds of technical, semi-technical, and popularized articles, as well as large amount of written material. This archive was collected by Dr. Bruce V. Lewenstein, a professor in the Dept. of Communication at Cornell University, Dr. Thomas F. Gieryn of Indiana University and Dr. William Dougan, and others with the assistance of the National Science Foundation.
Cold fusion.
Communication in science.
Nuclear fusion.
Science news.
Clippings. aat aat aat
Correspondence. aat ftamc aat
Floppy disks. aat
Interviews. aat
Printouts. aat
Video recordings. aat
Dougan, William, collector.
Gieryn, Thomas F., collector.
Lewenstein, Bruce V., collector.
AIP-ICOS
Cornell University. Carl A. Kroch Library. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections. 2B Carl A Kroch Library, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA USA
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