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185920244London: Printed for the Ray Society 1859. First Edition. Cloth. Good. First Edition. Folio pp. viii-x 143 blank ff 24 blank; dull green library linen boards with gilt lettering on spine; boards lightly soiled and rubbed; call numbers stamped to heel of spine; library bookplate to pastedown with "Discard" stamp; four-inch tear to fore-edge of half-title leaf; embossed library stamp and pencil annotations to title leaf; embossed library stamp to p. 1; library tickets and pockets to rear endpapers; cellotape repair to top edge of last plate; else a sound ex-library copy. Illustrated with twelve uncolored lithograph plates and accompanying letterpress descriptive text. Cloth. While serving as ship's surgeon aboard the H.M.S. Rattlesnake Huxley 1825-1895 collected and studied specimens of hydrozoas in the waters off Australia New Guinea and Palermo Italy. Through careful dissections and close observation of physical relationships Huxley succeeded in bringing more detailed order to the knowledge of these minute organisms. Printed for the Ray Society unknown
73775London Ray Society 1859. Folio. x 143 pp.; 12 engraved plates with explanatory text leaves a few text figures. Later black buckram with gilt title on the spine. Brown endpapers. = Written by Darwin's Bulldog the zoologist Thomas Henry Huxley 1825-1895 who was a ship's assistant surgeon and naturalist on board of HMS Rattlesnake. The Rattlesnake charted the Great Barrier Reef and the seas northwards to New Guinea. "Huxley's paper On the anatomy and the affinities of the family of Medusae' was published in 1849 by the Royal Society in its Philosophical Transactions. Huxley united the Hydroid and Sertularian polyps with the Medusae to form a class to which he subsequently gave the name of Hydrozoa. The connection he made was that all the members of the class consisted of two cell layers enclosing a central cavity or stomach. This is characteristic of the phylum now called the Cnidaria. He compared this feature to the serous and mucous structures of embryos of higher animals. When at last he got a grant from the Royal Society for the printing of plates Huxley was able to summarise this work in The Oceanic Hydrozoa published by the Ray Society in 1859'. The value of Huxley's work was recognised and on returning to England in 1850 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. In the following year at the age of twenty-six he not only received the Royal Society Medal but was also elected to the Council" Wikipedia. Pictorial bookplate on front pastedown; small library stamp on plate versos. Text leaves a bit brittle at edges; a few plates rather foxed a few marginal repairs. A good copy. Nissen ZBI 2065. hardcover
73774London Ray Society 1859. Folio. x 143 pp.; 12 engraved plates with explanatory text leaves a few text figures. Original quarter linen over limp boards. Printed label with title mounted on front board. = Written by Darwin's Bulldog the zoologist Thomas Henry Huxley 1825-1895 who was a ship's assistant surgeon and naturalist on board of HMS Rattlesnake. The Rattlesnake charted the Great Barrier Reef and the seas northwards to New Guinea. "Huxley's paper On the anatomy and the affinities of the family of Medusae' was published in 1849 by the Royal Society in its Philosophical Transactions. Huxley united the Hydroid and Sertularian polyps with the Medusae to form a class to which he subsequently gave the name of Hydrozoa. The connection he made was that all the members of the class consisted of two cell layers enclosing a central cavity or stomach. This is characteristic of the phylum now called the Cnidaria. He compared this feature to the serous and mucous structures of embryos of higher animals. When at last he got a grant from the Royal Society for the printing of plates Huxley was able to summarise this work in The Oceanic Hydrozoa published by the Ray Society in 1859'. The value of Huxley's work was recognised and on returning to England in 1850 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. In the following year at the age of twenty-six he not only received the Royal Society Medal but was also elected to the Council" Wikipedia.Inscribed by a former owner on the front free edpaper recto. Repair to front board. Boards and spine worn; text and plates mostly clean. A good to very good copy. Nissen ZBI 2065. hardcover
57707London The Ray Society 1859. Folio 34.9 x 26.1 cm. x 143 pp.; 12 engraved plates with explanatory text leaves a few text figures. Contemporary half morocco over grained cloth boards. Spine with five raised bands and gilt title. Yellow endpapers. = A well-bound copy of this important work written by Darwin's Bulldog the zoologist Thomas Henry Huxley 1825-1895 who was a ship's assistant surgeon and naturalist on board of HMS Rattlesnake. The Rattlesnake charted the Great Barrier Reef and the seas northwards to New Guinea. "Huxley's paper On the anatomy and the affinities of the family of Medusae' was published in 1849 by the Royal Society in its Philosophical Transactions. Huxley united the Hydroid and Sertularian polyps with the Medusae to form a class to which he subsequently gave the name of Hydrozoa. The connection he made was that all the members of the class consisted of two cell layers enclosing a central cavity or stomach. This is characteristic of the phylum now called the Cnidaria. He compared this feature to the serous and mucous structures of embryos of higher animals. When at last he got a grant from the Royal Society for the printing of plates Huxley was able to summarise this work in The Oceanic Hydrozoa published by the Ray Society in 1859'. The value of Huxley's work was recognised and on returning to England in 1850 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. In the following year at the age of twenty-six he not only received the Royal Society Medal but was also elected to the Council" Wikipedia. Provenance: armorial bookplate of Lord Avebury 'auctor pretiosa facit' mounted on the front pastedown. Most probably John Lubbock 1st Baron Avebury 4th Baronet 1834-1913 ".an English banker Liberal politician philanthropist scientist and polymath. Lubbock worked in his family company as a banker but made significant contributions in archaeology ethnography and several branches of biology. He coined the terms "Paleolithic" and "Neolithic" to denote the Old and New Stone Ages respectively. He helped establish archaeology as a scientific discipline and was influential in debates concerning evolutionary theory. He introduced the first law for the protection of the UK's archaeological and architectural heritage"Wikipedia. Also on the front pastedown a discrete Newcastle-upon-Tyne bookseller's label. Some shelf wear to spine tends and board edges; several plates rather foxed as usual. Nissen ZBI 2065. hardcover
1858411<p><strong>Folio 36.2 x 26.2 cm. x 143 pp.; 12 engraved plates with explanatory text leaves a few text figures. Original quarter linen over limp boards. Printed label with title mounted on front board. = Written by Darwin's Bulldog the zoologist Thomas Henry Huxley 1825-1895 who was a ship's assistant surgeon and naturalist on board of HMS Rattlesnake. The Rattlesnake charted the Great Barrier Reef and the seas northwards to New Guinea. Huxley's paper On the anatomy and the affinities of the family of Medusae' was published in 1849 by the Royal Society in its Philosophical Transactions. Huxley united the Hydroid and Sertularian polyps with the Medusae to form a class to which he subsequently gave the name of Hydrozoa. The connection he made was that all the members of the class consisted of two cell layers enclosing a central cavity or stomach. This is characteristic of the phylum now called the Cnidaria. He compared this feature to the serous and mucous structures of embryos of higher animals. When at last he got a grant from the Royal Society for the printing of plates Huxley was able to summarise this work in The Oceanic Hydrozoa published by the Ray Society in 1859'. The value of Huxley's work was recognised and on returning to England in 1850 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. In the following year at the age of twenty-six he not only received the Royal Society Medal but was also elected to the Council Wikipedia. On the front pastedown an armorial bookplate of the Rashleigh family Menabilly. At least one Rashleigh Jonathan junior 1845-1872 was interested in marine biology. A pencilled annotation on the Ray Society title. Boards and spine a bit worn at edges; text and plates mostly clean. A very good copy housed in a custom dark green slipcase with paper label. An excellent survivor preserved in the Publisher's original state. Nissen ZBI 2065.</strong></p> Ray Society paperback
18591664<p>London: Ray Society 1859. First edition.</p><p><strong>FINE FOLIO ENGRAVINGS OF TH HUXLEY'S DISCOVERIES DURING THE VOYAGE OF THE HMS RATTLESNAKE. </strong></p><p>25x32 cm folio hardcover tan cloth binding cancelled library bookplate to front paste-down i-x 143 pp 12 engraved plates by J Basire after Huxley's drawings each with an explanatory letterpress leaf.</p><p><strong>THOMAS H. HUXLEY </strong>1825-1895 "Charles Darwin's champion was ship's surgeon on the voyage of the 'Rattlesriake' to the Torres Straits off Australia however the natural history work he conducted on his own time. . . Through extensive shipboard dissections and through library work in Sydney Australia. Huxley was able to bring some order to these minute organisms which had been simply lumped together in those two great zoological lumber rooms Linneaus' Vermes and Cuvier's Radiata. .Working out the details and relationships of the delicate marine animals he studied set the pattern for his career and gave him a firm grasp of major zoological problems." D.S.B. Freeman 'Brit. Natural History Books' no. 1854.</p> Ray Society hardcover
5562287like new. unknown
0955552818.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1010561766.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
065618020X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
Features: Cover photo of the statue of J.Q.A. Ward in Central park; D-Day - An account of the operation from twelve hours before the first seaborne landing to twelve hours after, by Hanson W. Baldwin; France's first year under Charles de Gaulle; Great photo feature on Ethel Merman who stars in "Gypsy"; When the Public Judges the Supreme Court; Science, Psychiatry - or Witchery? - Elspeth Huxley examines what, if anything, the witch doctor does for his patients that might be of value for the rest of the world; Big League Pitching - In addition to brawn, a pitcher needs a brain; Fashion photos of women's sunshade suits; The Business of Baby-Sitting; Danish recipes; How to show off art in your home; One-page ad for Phillies Cheroot cigars inside front cover; and more. 48 pages. Many fascinating black and white reproductions of photos plus nice fashion ads, some of which are in color. Unmarked with average wear. A sound vintage copy. Book
1959143h5306New York: The New York Times Company. Good. 1959. First Edition. Single Issue Magazine. Features: Cover photo of the statue of J.Q.A. Ward in Central park; D-Day - An account of the operation from twelve hours before the first seaborne landing to twelve hours after by Hanson W. Baldwin; France's first year under Charles de Gaulle; Great photo feature on Ethel Merman who stars in "Gypsy"; When the Public Judges the Supreme Court; Science Psychiatry - or Witchery - Elspeth Huxley examines what if anything the witch doctor does for his patients that might be of value for the rest of the world; Big League Pitching - In addition to brawn a pitcher needs a brain; Fashion photos of women's sunshade suits; The Business of Baby-Sitting; Danish recipes; How to show off art in your home; One-page ad for Phillies Cheroot cigars inside front cover; and more. 48 pages. Many fascinating black and white reproductions of photos plus nice fashion ads some of which are in color. Unmarked with average wear. A sound vintage copy.; Folio - over 12" - 15" tall; The New York Times Magazine May 31 1959: D-Day The Way It Was J.Q.A. Ward Central park statues D-Day Hanson W. BaldwinCharles de Gaulle; France - politics Ethel Merman Gypsy Gypsy Rose Lee Supreme Court Elspeth Huxley witch doctors Basebal . The New York Times Company unknown
1964202G4099New York: The New York Times & Arno Press 1964. Book. Illus. by Falk Sam; Burns Pat; Einsel Walter; Terrim Lou; Golden Alice; Adelman Robert; Burckhardt Rudolph; Ducrot Jerome. Good. Single Issue Magazine. First Edition. Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. 64 pages. Features: Pop Art Sells On and On - Why - illustrated article; A Grand Boulevard for Washington - plans for improving Pennsylvania Avenue; The California Voter is Maddeningly Unpredictable; Plea for a 'New Phase in Negro Leadership' - suggestions for what should be done beyond protest; Travelling Across Siberia; Great two-page color-photo ad for Manhattan shirts features athletes Y.A. Tittle Clete Boyer Stirling Moss and Warren Spahn; Tracing the emotions and attitudes behind the new African States; Great color-photo ladies' fashion ads; Tips on Tipping and Tippees; The Big Daddies of Little League Baseball; Photos of Omaha Beach; Interior Design Photos featuring the 'Built-In" look of designs by Ward Bennett; Shirt fashion photos; Desegregation - After School; United States Lines ad features color photos of Mrs. Sally Victor Mr. and Mrs. Max E. Kruger and Howard Schenken. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound vintage copy. The New York Times & Arno Press Paperback
1960449G1664New York: The New York Times Company 1960. Book. Illus. by Derujinsky Gleb. Good. Single Issue Magazine. First Edition. Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. 56 pages. Features: Shadowy Power Behind Fidel Castro - article with photo of Castro and Che Guevara; Myths About the Worker Past age 40 - an expert looks at their capabilities; Despite it all the Parties Convene - the national political conventions; Student Shows Elder the Korean Path - the overthrow of Syngman Rhee and present efforts to remake South Korea represent an illuminating case of the young teaching the old - article with seven photos; ; The Safari Business is Booming - in East Africa demand runs ahead of supply for white hunters bearers animals shooting space time - everything but would-be 'bwanas' with money - article; Nice full-page color ad for Ruppert beer; In England Gambling has Status; Four Inside Views of Fashion - Pierre Cardin Norman Norell Norman Hartnell and Simonetta examine the fuss feathers and philosophy of frills and furbelows - article with photos; Garden of Art - photos from Old Westbury Gardens on Long Island; Nice color-photo one-page ad for Ballantine Beer shows couple on seashore; Black and white fashion photos of summer dresses; One-page color ad for Great Northern Railway and its vacations 'Way out West'; Nice color-photo ad for Rheingold beer aboard large sailboat; Numerous gorgeous color-photo fashion ads - our favorite being the beautiful ad for a red bandana print costume by Jonathan Logan Inc. Average wear. Unmarked. Some age-related yellowing . A sound vintage copy. The New York Times Company Paperback
1964202G4103New York: The New York Times & Arno Press 1964. Book. Illus. by Games George; Silverstone Marilyn; Glueckselig Leo; Flora James; Burns Michael; Anderson Doug; Leone J.; Pascal David; Dean Abner. Good. Single Issue Magazine. First Edition. Folio - over 12" - 15" tall. 80 pages. Features: Cover photo of diplomatic reception at the White House; Beautiful color fashion ads; Deep Analysis of the American Mind by a British psychiatrist; The Rise and Fall of the Watusi Tutsi - Photos and article on an earlier iteration of bloodshed between the Hutu and Tutsi people of Rwanda; More Americans own shares in U.S. Corporations than ever before; Photos of a ball at the White House - with dancing photos of LBJ Mrs. Anatoly Dobrynin Dr. Janet Travell Datin Ong of Malaysia Mrs. Antonio Carrillo Flores of Mexico G. Mennen Williams Ullina Koroma Lynda Bird Dave Lefeve Lady Bird Johnson and USSR Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin; In Defense of Charles de Gaulle; Why the Girls Scream Weep Flip - photo-illustrated article; Hollywood Laughs it Up - funny photos from movies; But Where are the Chaperons; The Call Him the Greatest on Ice - Photo-illustrated article on Gordie Howe of the Detroit Redwings; Nice color-photo centerfold for Stevens Fabrics features 19 models including someone who looks a lot like Johnny Carson; Photos of fashionable bookshelves; United States Lines color-photo ad includes Hildegarde Mr. Leon Cherksey and Mrs. Reed Albee; Kids and Cops - some New York kids eye New York's finest with mixed reactions. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound vintage copy. The New York Times & Arno Press Paperback
1940NG062961940 viii, 583 p., several figs, cloth (spine discoloured). Previous owner's name on title-page.
1940NG076651940 viii, 583 p., several figs, cloth. Previous owner's name on title-page.
1940NG427621940 viii, 583 p., several figures, publisher’s cloth. Ex library Dr. A.C. van Bruggen (with his signature on first free endpaper). Spine slightly discoloured, else a good copy.
194925550Oxford, (1949). Orig. full cloth. Back faded. VIII,583 pp.
1940020796Oxford England: Oxford University Press 1940. Reprint . Hardcover. Fine/Near Fine. Collection of 21 scholarly articles sponsored by the Association for the Study of Systematics in relation to general biology. Introduction & foreword by editor Julian Huxley who is "well aware of my anomalous position in this enterprise--a non-systematist as editor of a book on systematics" in 583 pages with Name & Subject Indices. Orig. published in Oxford in 1940 this is the 1952 reprint from sheets of that First Edition. From the well-preserved library of a local professor this hardcover book has navy blue publisher's cloth over boards with gilt lettering & design to spine. Condition is Fine: exceptionally clean binding strong & straight hinges secure. Pages modestly tanned; no foxing. Former owner's name stamp to ffep else unmarked. The DJ clipped at the lower front flap where British price was is Near Fine with slight rubbing to all corners light soil; nicely protected in new clear mylar cover free!Our photos depict the Exact book you will receive never "stock" images of books we don't actually have! Same Day Shipping on all orders received by 2 pm Weekdays Pacific time; later orders weekends & holidays ship very next business day. <br/> <br/> Oxford University Press hardcover
Z1-E-007-01390Classey for the Systematics Association. Used - Good. Ships from UK in 48 hours or less usually same day. Your purchase helps support Sri Lankan Children's Charity 'The Rainbow Centre'. Ex-library so some stamps and wear but in good overall condition. 100% money back guarantee. We are a world class secondhand bookstore based in Hertfordshire United Kingdom and specialize in high quality textbooks across an enormous variety of subjects. We aim to provide a vast range of textbooks rare and collectible books at a great price. Our donations to The Rainbow Centre have helped provide an education and a safe haven to hundreds of children who live in appalling conditions. We provide a 100% money back guarantee and are dedicated to providing our customers with the highest standards of service in the bookselling industry. Classey for the Systematics Association unknown
1940221673Oxford: Oxford at the Clarendon Press 1940. First Edition . Hardcover. Very Good/No Jacket. Hardcover; 8vo 583 pages. Navy blue buckram covers with gilt lettering on spine. Light to moderate edgewear/rubbing. Yellowed end papers and page ends but the pages themselves are bright and clean. Bottom edge deckled. Prev. owner's signature on ffep and lightly penciled notes on the ffep. With an agenda of a Linnean Society meeting from 1940 laid in back. VG/-- <br/> <br/> Oxford at the Clarendon Press hardcover
1952biblio379Oxford University Press Oxford 1952. NearFineHardcover navy cloth gIlt spine title and stamping no dj. Unsigned personal bookplate inside front cover. no wear clean unmarked text. 9.0"x5.7"x1.6". be30582. Oxford University Press hardcover
1992040871London: Macmillan Press Limited; New YOrk Stockton Press 1992. 4 vols. lviii 815; vii 747; vii 790; vii 888p. b/w illus. original brown cloth quarto format. Macmillan Press Limited; New YOrk, Stockton Press unknown books
199945679London: The Royal Horticultural Society 1999. 4 volumes thick 4to; color plates plain text illustrations text in double columns; original green cloth spines stamped in red and gilt; green board slipcase lettered in gilt; about fine. This edition produced by The Folio Society. <br/><br/> The Royal Horticultural Society hardcover books