“…(Sleight, Gilson, and Bierstedt, 1975) Subsequent cuprate superconductors command the attention of a great many researchers because of their high T c s (on the order of 100 K). The discovery of high T c superconductivity (HTSc) in the bismuthate system Ba 1−x K x BiO 3 (BKBO) more than ten years ago (Cava, Batlogg, Krajewski, Farrow, Jr, White, Short, Peck, and Kometani, 1988;Mattheiss, Gyorgy, and Johnson Jr., 1988;Hinks, Dabrowski, Jorgensen, Mitchell, Richards, Pei, and Shi, 1988) with a T c of 30 K began an equally significant, complementary course of research into the nature of HTSc for the following reasons: (1) it contains no copper, (2) it is an isotropic conductor, (3) it has no evident magnetic ordering off stoichiometry, (4) its superconductivity occurs at the boundary of a metal-insulator transition (a commonality with the cuprates) (Hinks, Dabrowski, Jorgensen, Mitchell, Richards, Pei, and Shi, 1988;Dabrowski, Hinks, Jorgensen, Kalia, Vashishta, Richards, a.…”