1 281 résultats
6293Paris, Didot jeune, an X. 6 volumes in-8 de [4]-VIII-341p., [4]-384p., [4]-381p., [4]-368p., [4]-438p., et un atlas de [4]p., 17 vues et 9 cartes, plein veau moucheté, dos lisses ornés de filets et fleurons dorés, pièces de titre rouge. Reliures un peu malmenées, coiffes frottées, mors un peu fendus, épidermures, auréoles pales à trois volumes, plus présentes dans l'atlas. Chaque première page est frappée d'un large tampon non identifié par votre serviteur.
104239De l'Imprimerie Didot Jeune, An X (1801-1802), 5 volumes +1atlas in-8 de 220x140 mm environ, viij-341 pages - 384 pp., - 381 pp., - 368 pp.,- 438 pp., dernier volume-atlas contenant 17 vues sous serpentes et 9 cartes dont 8 dépliantes, cartonnage de l'éditeur portant titres et tomaisons dorés sur le dos. Feuillets non rognés. Dos insolés, frottements sur les coins et coiffes, petits défauts de marge sur quelques pages sans atteinte au texte, sinon bon état.
1871P1-4C-4Paris, Hachette et Cie, 1871. In-8 (24x16cm) relié demi-chagrin vert de l'époque, dos à nerfs orné, tranches dorées. Quelques rousseurs en début et fin d’ouvrage. Illustrations in-texte, dont 17 planches. Bel exemplaire. (4)-II-412 pp. + 1 carte dépliante h.t. Edition originale française. Le récit et les illustrations de Whymper constituent un témoignage des plus importants sur l'Alaska, à l'époque de son acquisition par les U.S.A.
41602Paris Librairie Hachette et Cie 1871 in 8 (24x16,5) 1 volume demi chagrin marron de l'époque, dos à nerfs orné de fleurons dorés, plats de percaline marron, tranches dorées, II et 412 pages, avec 37 gravures sur bois, dont hors texte, et une carte dépliante. Ouvrage traduit de l'anglais avec l'autorisation de l'auteur par Emile Jonveaux. Frédérick Whymper, 1838-1901, explorateur britannique. Bel exemplaire ( Photographies sur demande / We can send pictures of this book on simple request )
2615HACHETTE 1871 ,in4 broché ,traduit par Emile Jonvaux ,412p , 37 ill gravées /bois et une carte , édition originale
187111339Paris, Librairie Hachette, 1871. In-8 de [6]-II-412 pages, demi-chagrin rouge, plats de percaline, dos orné d'encadrements et titre dorés, tranches dorées. Rousseurs.
198663604Stuttgart ; Wien : Thienemann, Edition Erdmann 1986. 271 S. : 47 Abb., 9 Kt. ; 21 cm, mit Schutzumschlag Gewebe, gebundene Ausgabe, Leinen, Exemplar in gutem Erhaltungszustand
1982V4993Zürich/München (Artemis) 1982 (= Erste Ausgabe). 8°, Originalbroschur, 240 S., einige schwarzweiße Bildtafeln
2003V42564Essen (Magnus) 2003 (= Erste Ausgabe). 8°, Originalkarton mit illustriertem Originalumschlag (Hardcover) 320 S, Abbildungen, Karten, ISBN 3884000195 1
18223390Weimar, Geographisches Institut, 1822. XIV, 604 S. 8°. Pp. der Zeit mit Rückenschild (Rücken mit Spuren eines gelösten Bibliotheksschildchens, gebräunt, bestoßen und etw. beschabt, Kapital etw. eingerissen).
1944142921Couverture souple. Revue 26 x 34 cm.
Incisione inserita nell'opera "A New, Royal, Authentic and Complete System of Universal Geography, Ancient and Modern: Including All the Late Important Discoveries Made by the English, and Other Celebrated Navigators .. History and Description of the Whole World... Likewise the Essence of the Voyages of the Most Enterprising Navigators..." edita a Londra da J. Cooke nel gennaio del 1787
19004544Various locations in British Columbia and Alaska 1900. Very good. 14 leaves illustrated with 111 vernacular sepia-toned photographs between 2.5 x 4.5 inches and 3.5 x 5.5 inches. Mostly mounted four per page. Oblong folio. Contemporary black cloth gilt string tied. Minor edge wear and rubbing. Some edge chipping to a handful of album leaves occasional dust-soiling. With 5pp. typed and numbered list laid in keyed to manuscript numbering beneath each photograph. A phenomenal collection of vernacular photographs taken by an unidentified traveler on a voyage to British Columbia and Alaska around the turn of the 20th century. Most of the photographs were taken from aboard a steamship or from a railroad car when they venture inland but occasionally the compiler includes shots from the ground. The photographs begin with numerous scenic landscapes in and around Nelson Rossland and Victoria British Columbia picturing landmarks such as Kootenay Lake Bonnington Falls the Cascade Mountains and a "Government House" in Victoria. The scene then shifts to Alaska picturing Devil's Thumb various glaciers a wonderful totem in Simpson distant shots of Juneau and Skagway and much more. Once inland the compiler takes pictures of the White Pass Lake Bennet White Horse and more before getting back on a steamship. One particularly interesting image from White Horse shows a pair of businesses set up in tents - Cap. P. Martin's Cigar Store and the Vancouver Hotel. Once back on the steamship the compiler shoots Five Finger Rapids before reaching the "town" of Yukon really just a loose handful of wooden huts. The intrepid traveler lands next in Dawson City where they include at least half a dozen fantastic shots of the settlement and its downtown area. The next series of images in Grand Forks show exterior shots of gold mines called Gold Hill and Eldorado #26 and a sweeping "View of Klondike Valley." The traveler then apparently turned south as the next series of images picture Taku Alert Bay with images of five Totems and the local cemetery and eight views of Fraser Canon. The album concludes with a few shots of the Illecillewaet Glacier Lakes Agnes and Louise and several views in and around Banff. The latter images include one of a bear and two featuring grazing buffalo. An interesting and wide-ranging collection of photographs featuring the untouched majesty of the landscapes of Alaska and the Canadian Northwest mixed with areas already being developed and exploited by human prospectors and travelers. The images are accompanied by an invaluable list of captions which are vital to identifying the locations of the images which appear to emanate from slightly earlier than usual in photographic groups from these areas. unknown
197822745Heidelberg, Springer Verlag, 1978.
198681204Canton CT: Kidder Corp Coins 1986. Presumed first minting thus. Coin/Medal. Very good. Coin is oval shaped approximately 2 inches in length and 1.5 inches in width. Front side has a gold color rope braid at the outer edge then a red inner ring stating USS Alaska SSBN 732 with the word Alert Confident and Able the boat's motto in gold rectangular boxes and white images of a porpoise and a sea lion. The center has a whale at the top over a shield with a Trident on a blue background. The other side has gold color rope braid at the outer edge and a blue center areas with the words USS Alaska 1986 SSBN 732 and Kodiak Tough under the image of a large bear exiting a waterfall with a fish in its mouth. In a small plastic envelop with information on Kidder Corp Coins printed on it. USS Alaska SSBN-732 is a United States Navy Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine which has been in commission since 1986. She is the fourth US Navy ship to be named for the Territory or State of Alaska. The contract to build Alaska was awarded to the Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics Corporation in Groton Connecticut on 27 February 1978 and her keel was laid down there on 9 March 1983. She was launched on 12 January 1985 sponsored by Mrs. Catherine Stevens wife of US Senator Theodore F. Stevens of Alaska; and commissioned on 25 January 1986. USS Alaska spent much of 1986 engaged in shakedown training for her two crews and in clearing up the many details that attend a new fleet ballistic missile submarine's addition to the Fleet. She operated initially from New London Connecticut and Port Canaveral Florida but shifted homeport to the Pacific Northwest later in the year 4 September to 1 October 1986. Alaska sailed through the Panama Canal and visited San Francisco California 21-29 September while en route. She then served with Submarine Squadron 17 Submarine Group 9 at Naval Submarine Base Bangor Washington. Alaska sailed on her first missile deterrent patrol manned by her Blue Crew in the Pacific 7 December 1986 to 19 February 1987. Her Gold Crew carried out Patrol 2 16 March to 28 May 1987. She completed an engineered overhaul at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard Bremerton Washington 1 May 2000 to 9 December 2001. The work included a Trident II D5 "backfit" that enabled Alaska to fire the improved version of the submarine launched ballistic missile. In addition the overhaul upgraded her to shoot the Mk 48 Advanced Capability ADCAP torpedo. Alaska had carried out 47 Trident I C4 and 12 Trident II D5 deterrent missile patrols when she sailed from Kitsap for the final time on 8 July 2006. The submarine subsequently completed a 27½-month engineered refueling and overhaul at Norfolk Naval Shipyard Virginia on 8 March 2009. Alaska shifted to Submarine Squadron 20 Submarine Group 10 at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay Georgia on 1 May 2009; she arrived at Kings Bay on 1 April. On 28 April 2010 the Navy announced plans to convert living spaces on Alaska to accommodate female crewmembers. Kidder Corp Coins unknown
198681255Canton CT: Kidder Corp Coins 1986. Presumed first minting thus. Patches. Very good. Coin is oval shaped approximately 3.5 inches in length and 2.5 inches in width. Patch has a gold color rope braid at the outer edge then a red inner ring stating USS Alaska SSBN 732 with the word Alert Confident and Able the boat's motto in gold rectangular boxes and white images of a porpoise and a sea lion. The center has a whale at the top over a shield with a Trident on a blue background. USS Alaska SSBN-732 is a United States Navy Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine which has been in commission since 1986. She is the fourth US Navy ship to be named for the Territory or State of Alaska. The contract to build Alaska was awarded to the Electric Boat Division of General Dynamics Corporation in Groton Connecticut on 27 February 1978 and her keel was laid down there on 9 March 1983. She was launched on 12 January 1985 sponsored by Mrs. Catherine Stevens wife of US Senator Theodore F. Stevens of Alaska; and commissioned on 25 January 1986. USS Alaska spent much of 1986 engaged in shakedown training for her two crews and in clearing up the many details that attend a new fleet ballistic missile submarine's addition to the Fleet. She operated initially from New London Connecticut and Port Canaveral Florida but shifted homeport to the Pacific Northwest later in the year 4 September to 1 October 1986. Alaska sailed through the Panama Canal and visited San Francisco California 21-29 September while en route. She then served with Submarine Squadron 17 Submarine Group 9 at Naval Submarine Base Bangor Washington. Alaska sailed on her first missile deterrent patrol manned by her Blue Crew in the Pacific 7 December 1986 to 19 February 1987. Her Gold Crew carried out Patrol 2 16 March to 28 May 1987. She completed an engineered overhaul at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard Bremerton Washington 1 May 2000 to 9 December 2001. The work included a Trident II D5 "backfit" that enabled Alaska to fire the improved version of the submarine launched ballistic missile. In addition the overhaul upgraded her to shoot the Mk 48 Advanced Capability ADCAP torpedo. Alaska had carried out 47 Trident I C4 and 12 Trident II D5 deterrent missile patrols when she sailed from Kitsap for the final time on 8 July 2006. The submarine subsequently completed a 27½-month engineered refueling and overhaul at Norfolk Naval Shipyard Virginia on 8 March 2009. Alaska shifted to Submarine Squadron 20 Submarine Group 10 at Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay Georgia on 1 May 2009; she arrived at Kings Bay on 1 April. On 28 April 2010 the Navy announced plans to convert living spaces on Alaska to accommodate female crewmembers. Kidder Corp Coins unknown
0882401831New. paperback. New. Satisfaction Guaranteed or your money back. paperback
1978260148BBMchn., Piper, (1978). Mit 63 (davon 9 farb.) Abb., 9 Ktn. u. graph. Darst. 213 S. OPbd. m. farb. ill. OU. - Gutes Ex.
193441889Stuttgart, Lutz, 1934. Halbleinen
1916257480Stuttgart, Lutz, 1916. Halbleinen
195573867Washington DC: Geological Survey 1955. Very large color wall map of Alaska on original rollers. 1 map on two sheets measuring 4 feet 3 inches by 5 feet 7 inches. Inset map of the Aleutian Islands. Scale 1:1584000.1 inch=25 miles. A remarkably attractive map in unexpectedly nice condition. Geological Survey unknown
xvi, 402 p. incl. front. plates, ports., maps. 23 cm. Hardcover Very good condition
193058585Boston: W.A. Wilde Co. 1930. 8vo. xv 1 402 pp. Photo frontisp. numerous photo plates. Blue cloth gilt lettering map endpapers w/ d.j. chipping & tear head of spine upper corner front cover affecting a few letters minor scuffing couple closed tears still NF/Fair copy from the library of Wilma Burmester Bishop 1887-1969 widow of Roy T. Bishop 1881-1950 former owner of the Pendleton Woolen Mills. First edition of this anthology of stories personal accounts and historical references to Klondike Gold Rush figures Native America Eskimos traveling the Yukon River and more by this famed Alaska pioneering woman. Mary Lee Davis arrived in Fairbanks in 1917 on the steamer Alaska because her husband John had been assigned by the U.S. Geological Survey to create a mine experiment station in Fairbanks. Mary Davis purchased the famed arts & crafts bungalow built by Lucille McCarthy now known as the Mary Lee Davis House. W.A. Wilde Co., hardcover
Vannes, Lib. Lafolye et J. de Lamarzelle - 1933 - In-8 - Broché - Illustrations NB dans le texte et HT - XXIII & 403 pages - Etat neuf
Tela c/sovraccoperta, cm14x21, pp 212 (4); tavole in nero.