商用無料の写真検索さん
           


DSC01677 - Carbide Willson Ruins : 無料・フリー素材/写真

DSC01677 - Carbide Willson Ruins / dgjarvis10@gmail.com
このタグをブログ記事に貼り付けてください。
トリミング(切り除き):
使用画像:     注:元画像によっては、全ての大きさが同じ場合があります。
サイズ:横      位置:上から 左から 写真をドラッグしても調整できます。
あなたのブログで、ぜひこのサービスを紹介してください!(^^
DSC01677 - Carbide Willson Ruins

QRコード

ライセンスクリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示-継承 2.1
説明PLEASE, NO invitations or self promotions, THEY WILL BE DELETED. My photos are FREE to use, just give me credit and it would be nice if you let me know, thanks.Time (6:16am) to head back to the car as the day was just starting and I had lots to see.The ruins are what’s left of Carbide Willson’s fertilizer plant, on the left is what is left of the generator station built on Meech Creek.On the right is what remains of the acid condenser tower he built and believed it to be the perfect acid condensation plant, the first Phosphorus Acid Condensation Plant in the world.On the left is the Generation Station with the water intake hole to divert water to the generator.------------------------------------------------------------------------------Carbide Willson:Thomas Leopold Willson (1860–1915) was a Canadian inventor. He experimented with industrial and chemical processes, a lighting system that failed and electro-thermal reductions of metallic oxides, which resulted in marketing success. He is best known for the commercial process of making calcium carbide and using it to generate acetylene fuel. His process led to the formation of what became Union Carbide, now owned by Dow Chemical. In 1895, Willson developed a carbide industry on the Welland Canal in southern Ontario, plants in Ottawa, and in Shawinigan, Quebec. Acetylene lighting became the standard for lighting on streets, in buildings, and in car headlamps and marine signals, making him a successful industrialist.He settled in Ottawa in 1901 with a summer house on Meech Lake in Gatineau. He was the first automobile owner in Ottawa. Willson’s experiments resulted in over 70 patents. He also applied his innovative ideas in a number of industries: carbide, pulp and paper, railways, dams, and fertilizers.One of Willson’s innovations involved the production of a nitrogen-based solid that could be used as fertilizer. Willson believed that the process could revolutionize agriculture and in 1912, set out to establish a fertilizer plant at Meech Lake. His project was financially backed by Interstate Chemical, an American fertilizer company, and James Buchanan Duke, the American tobacco and textile millionaire. Willson’s factory surpassed expectations. With so many projects, Willson was financially stretched. He missed a payment to Duke, who then seized Willson’s Meech Lake factory. Duke wasn’t interested in maintaining the factory and let it fall into ruin. Willson died a short time later, of a heart attack in 1915 while in New York attempting to raise money for industrial plans in Newfoundland and Labrador.
撮影日2018-08-23 07:16:46
撮影者dgjarvis10@gmail.com , Halifax, Canada
タグ
撮影地Québec, Canada 地図
カメラILCE-6300 , SONY
露出0.067 sec (1/15)
開放F値f/3.5
焦点距離18 mm


(C)名入れギフト.com