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Connecticut Avenue Bridge - Wash. DC


Connecticut Avenue Bridge - Wash. DC

1943
20th century
177 x 188 mm

Reynold Henry Weidenaar,  American, (1915–1985)

Object Type: Print
Creation Place: North America, United States, Washington, DC
Medium and Support: Etching on paper
Credit Line: Art Collection purchase, 1998
Accession Number: 1998.5.8
Current Location: Lauinger Library : 5 - Fifth floor : BFCSC : Stacks

Keywords

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This object has the following keywords:
  • bridges (built works) - Structures spanning and providing passage over waterways, topographic depressions, transportation routes, or similar circulation barriers.
  • rivers
  • trees
  • water - A liquid made up of molecules of hydrogen and oxygen (HO2). When pure, it is colorless, tasteless, and odorless. It exists in gaseous, liquid, and solid forms; it is liquid at room temperature. It is the liquid of which seas, lakes, and rivers are composed, and which falls as rain. Water is one of the most plentiful and essential of compounds. It is vital to life, participating in virtually every process that occurs in plants and animals. One of its most important properties is its ability to dissolve many other substances. The versatility of water as a solvent is essential to living organisms. The term "water" is typically used to refer to the liquid form of this compound; for the solid or gaseous forms, use "ice" or "water vapor."

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