About
History
The Institute was incorporated in 1974 as a non-profit research foundation, on land donated by the estate of an amateur naturalist who had cataloged the local population of Sauromalus ater — the common chuckwalla — for which the Institute is, somewhat whimsically, named.
The founding charter commits the Institute to three activities:
- The unhurried study of quantum field theory.
- The publication of short, careful notes on questions of pedagogical interest.
- The maintenance of a small library of physics monographs and a working blackboard.
Facilities
- A library of approximately 4,200 volumes, with a particular strength in mid-century field-theory texts.
- Three offices, a seminar room seating twelve, and an outdoor blackboard shaded by a ramada.
- A modest computational allocation, used principally for symbolic algebra and one-loop integrals.
Contact
Correspondence may be sent to the Institute care of P.O. Box 0, Six Mile Spring, Nevada. Electronic mail is read on Tuesdays.