Word: layered
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...defense mechanism as sophisticated as tomorrow's anti-missile missile. Attacked by a water strider, a fast, long-legged bug that is its customary nemesis, the Stenodus simply squirts out a charge of fluid detergent from a pair of abdominal glands. The detergent destroys the thin elastic layer of water that marks the boundary between fluid and air. With that surface tension gone, a small water wave rises and propels the Stenodus out of danger. When the attacking water strider, which is normally supported by the film of surface tension, tries to follow, it sinks and drowns...
...bending metal," says Defense Secretary Robert McNamara. At North American Aviation, where formal educational enrollment has almost doubled to 10,000 in five years, employees can get fulltime graduate fellowships, part-time work-study fellowships, or join one of hundreds of in-plant classes that range from hypersonic boundary layer theory to environmental control systems for the Apollo moon rocket. Since 80% of North American's business depends on the new technology of missiles, electronics, rocket engines and atomics, the company considers the money-$4,500,000 last year-extremely well spent...
...things are obvious to the expert but hasty eye. The moon's "seas" do not seem to be covered with deep, fluffy dust, as many lunar experts have argued. If they were, the little 3-ft. craters would not have steep edges. There may be a layer of soft material an inch or so thick, but Dr. Eugene Shoemaker of the U.S. Geological Survey, a former believer in deep moon dust, said that he would not hesitate to step on the moon's surface. He was not sure, however, how much weight the moon's material would...
Later they bulldozed off the rich corn-feeding layer...
...green of the Antarctic Sea. Below were the ships of New Zealand's navy, which had quickly deployed to rescue stations in case of trouble. Then the plane approached its landing point on the bleak continent that is twice the size of the U.S. and covered with a layer of ice up to two miles thick...