Diagramaceous soil: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Diagramaceous_soil_bingo_algorithm_harvest.jpg|300px|thumb|Artist-engineer [[Computation (nonfiction)|computes]] a new variety of [[Algorithm (nonfiction)|Bingo algorithm]] from Diagramaceous soil using an electronic harvester. The machine shown here is a member of the [[Red Wire support group]].]]'''Diagramaceous Soil''' is a [[soil (nonfiction)]] that gives rise to [[Mathematical diagram (nonfiction)|mathematical diagrams]].
[[File:Diagramaceous_soil_bingo_algorithm_harvest.jpg|300px|thumb|Artist-Engineer [[Don Tasmian]] runs [[Computation (nonfiction)|computations]] on Diagramaceous soil, generates Bingo tokens.]]'''Diagramaceous Soil''' is a [[soil (nonfiction)]] that gives rise to [[Mathematical diagram (nonfiction)|mathematical diagrams]].


Diagramaceous soil is a naturally-occurring form of [[transdimensional corporation]].
Diagramaceous soil is a naturally-occurring form of [[transdimensional corporation]].


[[John Brunner]] stated that [[diagramaceous soil]] was used in secret Australian-American experiments towards [[Weaponization (nonfiction)|weaponizing]] the [[Didgeridoo (nonfiction)|didgeridoo]] during the Second World War.
[[John Brunner]] stated that diagramaceous soil was used in secret Australian-American experiments towards [[Weaponization (nonfiction)|weaponizing]] the [[Didgeridoo (nonfiction)|didgeridoo]] during the Second World War.


See [[Where the coal-face meets the road]].
See [[Where the coal-face meets the road]].

Revision as of 22:06, 19 October 2016

Artist-Engineer Don Tasmian runs computations on Diagramaceous soil, generates Bingo tokens.

Diagramaceous Soil is a soil (nonfiction) that gives rise to mathematical diagrams.

Diagramaceous soil is a naturally-occurring form of transdimensional corporation.

John Brunner stated that diagramaceous soil was used in secret Australian-American experiments towards weaponizing the didgeridoo during the Second World War.

See Where the coal-face meets the road.

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference