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MARC Record from Oregon Libraries

Record ID marc_oregon_summit_records/catalog_files/washs02192008.mrc_revrev.mrc:1889943496:1688
Source Oregon Libraries
Download Link /show-records/marc_oregon_summit_records/catalog_files/washs02192008.mrc_revrev.mrc:1889943496:1688?format=raw

LEADER: 01688pam a2200409 a 4500
001 56450214
003 OCoLC
005 20070515044006.0
008 040419s2004 enk j 000 0beng
015 $aGBA4X5678$2bnb
016 7 $a012875370$2Uk
020 $a1904095763 (pbk.)
020 $a9781904095767 (pbk.)
035 $a(OCoLC)56450214
040 $aUKM$beng$cUKM$dNTE
042 $aukblsr
043 $ae-uk---
049 $aNTET
082 04 $a510.92$222
092 $aj510.92$bL942le
100 1 $aLethbridge, Lucy.
245 10 $aAda Lovelace :$bthe computer wizard of Victorian England /$cLucy Lethbridge.
250 $a[New ed.]
260 $aLondon :$bShort,$c2004.
300 $a81 p. ;$c20 cm.
440 0 $aWho was-- ?
500 $aPrevious ed.: 2001.
520 $aDaughter of the famous romantic poet Lord Byron, Adad Lovelace was a child prodigy. Brilliant at maths, she read numbers loke most people read words. In 1843 Ada came to the attention of Charles Babbage, a scientist and techno-whizz who had just built an amazing new "thinking machine." She and Mr. Babbage started working together--a perfect partnership which led to the most important invention of the modern world: the computer.
600 10 $aLovelace, Ada King,$cCountess of,$d1815-1852$vJuvenile literature.
650 0 $aWomen mathematicians$zGreat Britain$vBiography$vJuvenile literature.
650 0 $aMathematicians$zGreat Britain$vBiography$vJuvenile literature.
650 0 $aComputers and women$xHistory$vJuvenile literature.
907 $a.b33734331$bwe $c-
902 $a070720
998 $b1$c070515$dm$ea$f-$g0
907 $a.b33734331
945 $lwez $aj510.92$bL942le