Re: (OT) Re: A89: What's Wrong?
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Re: (OT) Re: A89: What's Wrong?
Glass is a solid that behaves like a liquid. I don't know if that's what
TGaArdvark means or not but, I think it is. It's why, if you see some old
glass, it'll be thicker at the bottom of the pane and thiner towards the
top.
> that the stained glass windows of some medieval churches seem to
> "run"...
I believe that's so... But, I'm not positive. I'm near positive. I hope
my extremely limited knowledge helped you out in some form or fashion...
Glenn Murphy
----- Original Message -----
From: JayEll64@aol.com
To: assembly-89@lists.ticalc.org
Sent: Friday, January 19, 2001 12:47 AM
Subject: (OT) Re: A89: What's Wrong?
I always thought glass was just a viscous liquid, which would explain (so
I've heard) that the stained glass windows of some medieval churches seem to
"run"... I'm kind of curious; can anyone explain if glass is solid why it
could be mistaken for a liquid, or vice versa?
JayEll
In a message dated 1/18/01 4:52:37 PM Mountain Standard Time,
TGaArdvark@aol.com writes:
Glass is amorphous.
References: