502 résultats
18363145New York: Wiley & Long 1836. First Edition . Cloth. Good. 16mo - over 5¾" - 6¾" tall. Green boards. 3vi-xviii268p12 fold out platesillus Some browning on plates. Backstrip needs to be reglued. 3" split on baxkstrip. Early owners name ink on fep 1854. Gilt title on spine From the estate of Levi Lincoln- Lieut George Lincoln MSA Oct 4 1834 <br/> <br/> Wiley & Long hardcover
1995w210630276Sheffield Academic Press 1995. 370pp. Over sized black hardback with DJ VG index bibliography maps and figures footnotes The Absolute Chronology of the Aegean Early Bronze Age : Archaeology Radiocarbon and History . Hard Cover. Very Good/Very Good. Sheffield Academic Press Hardcover
1964074833New York: Harcourt Brace & World 1964. 1st printing. Square and unmarked. Map endpapers. 290pp. Photos. 2 fold-out maps. Unclipped jacket is lightly rubbed. In a protective mylar cover. The four worlds meeting in this book are Islam Buddhism Hinduism and Communism. Traveling through Pakistan to scale 24000-foot Mount Saraghrar for the first time. First American Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. 8vo - 8" - 9" Tall. Harcourt, Brace & World Hardcover
1856059903New York: Harper & Brothers 1856. Original blind-stamped cloth binding just rubbed through at corners and spine ends. Darkly toned endpapers. Light scattered foxing inside. ix 445pp. with four pages of publisher adverts. 12 illustrations. March Charles W. Charles Wainwright 1815-1864. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/No Dust Jacket. 12mo - over 6" - 8" Tall. Harper & Brothers Hardcover
196222070123Oxford University Press UK 1962. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. Signed by Author. Hardcover. 275 pages. Signed by Author. PUBLISHING DETAILS: Oxford University Press UK 1962. First Edition. CONDITION: The book itself is in very good condition and comes in very good dust jacket. More specifically: Boards have no wear rubbing or soiling. Dust jacket has light creasing. Edges of dust jacket have superficial wear. Dust jacket is unclipped. Dust jacket is protected in clear plastic sleeve. Pages are lightly tanned. Quantity Available: 1. Category: Exploration; Inventory No: 22070123. Oxford University Press hardcover
1802E0151<p>2 volumes with Atlas. 4xxiv385 pages with xxii-xxiv lists books of voyages available from the publisher; 4418 pages with appendix containing vocabularies of the languages of Yukagir Yakut Tungoose Kamchatka the Aleutian Islands and Kadiak and inex. Atlas with title list of plates 14 engraved plates & large folding engraved map. Text volumes are small octavo 7¾" x 4½" 19th century quarter calf & boards spines tooled in gilt morocco lettering pieces; atlas is quarto 11" x 7½" in period tree calf spine tooled in gilt. Translated by J Castéra. Howes S-117 First French Edition.<br /><br />Martin Sauer was an English civil servant who knew Russian French and German. He became acquainted with Joseph Billings in St Petersburg in the 1780s. He agreed to join Billings expedition as his secretary and interpreter. It was agreed that he would write the official account but there is some controversy about his actives when he returned to St Petersburg in 1794. It has been suggested that he left hurriedly for England with much of the important archival material from the voyage including diaries and secret reports so that he could publish a record of the expedition before Russian authorities and scholars in the Academy of Sciences could review its details. Sauer's <em>An account of the Geographical and Astronomical Expedition to the Northern Parts of Russia</em> was published in London in 1802. It contains an abundance of detail about eastern Siberia and the Aleutian Islands and records the expeditions visits to Kodiak Island Prince William Sound and the coast south as far as Yakutat Bay. <br /><br />The chart was made by Aaron Arrowsmith from Sauer's notes and Billings observations and the whole complements well the other contemporary accounts of the expedition by the cartographer Gavriil Sarychev and the naturalist Carl Heinrich Merck. Aaron Arrowsmith 1750–1823 was an English cartographer engraver and publisher and founding member of the Arrowsmith family of geographers. He moved to Soho Square London from Winston County Durham when about twenty years of age and was employed by John Cary the engraver and William Faden. He became Hydrographer to the Prince of Wales ca. 1810 and subsequently to the King in 1820. In January 1790 he made himself famous by his large chart of the world on Mercator projection. Four years later he published another large map of the world on the globular projection with a companion volume of explanation.<br /><br /><strong>Condition:</strong><br /><br />Some rubbing and wear to coves of both atlas and text volumes some chipping to spine ends small gouge at back of atlas and stamp to front end paper else in very good condition.</p> Chez F Buisson hardcover
1856E0560<p>3 volumes: xvii1537 pages with 90 lithographs plates including the usual expunged bathing plate many in color including 3 "facsimiles" of Japanese woodblock prints 2 folding; 6 maps and charts 2 folding; 79 woodcuts in the text; 2414414-1xi pages with 4 color lithographs of Chinese scenes; 2 uncolored natural history engraved plates; 6 hand-colored lithographs of birds; 10 hand-colored steel-engravings of fish; 5 lithographs of shells 2 hand-colored; 16 diagram plates of winds and currents; 14-page facsimile of Japanese language version of the U.S.-Japan treaty; 17 folding charts on 16 sheets; numerous woodcuts in the text; xliii17051 pages woodcut star charts throughout. Volume III titled "United States Japan Expedition. Observations on the zodiacal light from April 2 1853 to April 22 1855 . by Rev. George Jones A.M. chaplain United States Navy". Quarto 11½ x 8 ¾" bound in the original blind stamped cloth. Volume 1 rebacked with the original cloth spine laid down. Hill 1332; Sabin 30968 Stabbed signature of the author included. First edition of the House Issue.<br /><br />Detailed and profusely illustrated account of Perry's expedition to open Japan to the West; Upon his return to the U.S. his chief duty for the following year was to compile his reports of the expedition aided by Francis Hawks. The first volume has the account of the voyage and lithographs of the travel; the second volume has the natural history reports by D.S. Green and others and includes hand-colored plates of Japanese fishes and shells. In addition to the artist W. Heine from whose drawings a great number of the lithographs were made the daguerreotypist E. Brown Jr. went on the expedition taking what were undoubtedly the earliest photographic images of Japan many of them reproduced lithographically in this work. This copy with the nude bathing plate which was not included on the list of plates and not issued in all copies. <br /><br />In advance of his voyage to the Far East Commodore Perry read widely amongst available books about Tokugawa Japan. His research even included consultation with the increasingly well-known Japanologist Philipp Franz von Siebold who had lived on the Dutch island of Dejima for eight years before retiring to Leiden in the Netherlands. In 1852 Perry embarked from Norfolk Virginia for Japan in command of a squadron in search of a Japanese trade treaty. Aboard a black-hulled steam frigate he ported Mississippi Plymouth Saratoga and Susquehanna at Uraga Harbor near Edo modern Tokyo on July 8 1853. His actions at this crucial juncture were informed by a careful study of Japan's previous contacts with Western ships and what could be known about the Japanese hierarchical culture. He was met by representatives of the Tokugawa Shogunate who told him to proceed to Nagasaki where there was limited trade with the Netherlands and which was the only Japanese port open to foreigners at that time. Perry refused to leave and demanded permission to present a letter from President Millard Fillmore threatening force if he was denied. Perry ordered his ships to attack several buildings around the harbor to demonstrate US naval power. The Commodore was fully prepared for more hostilities if his negotiations with the Japanese failed and threatened to use unrestrained fire if the Japanese refused to negotiate. He sent two white flags to them telling them to hoist the flags when they wished a bombardment from his fleet to cease and to surrender. Perry's ships were equipped with new Paixhans shell guns capable of wreaking great destruction with every shell. The Japanese military forces could not resist Perry's modern weaponry; the term "Black Ships" in Japan would later come to symbolize a threat imposed by Western technology. Perry returned in February 1854 with twice as many ships finding that the delegates had prepared a treaty embodying virtually all the demands in Fillmore's letter. Perry signed the Convention of Kanagawa on March 31 1854 and departed mistakenly believing the agreement had been made with imperial representatives. The agreement was made with the Shogun the de facto ruler of Japan. On his way to Japan Perry anchored off Keelung in Formosa modern day Taiwan for ten days. Perry and crew members landed on Formosa and investigated the potential of mining the coal deposits in that area. He emphasized in his reports that Formosa provided a convenient mid-way trade location. Formosa was also very defensible. It could serve as a base for exploration as Cuba had done for the Spanish in the Americas. Occupying Formosa could help the US to counter European monopolization of the major trade routes. President Franklin Pierce declined the suggestion remarking such a remote possession would be an unnecessary drain of resources and that he would be unlikely to receive the consent of Congress. When Perry returned to the United States in 1855 Congress voted to grant him a reward of $20000 in appreciation of his work in Japan. Perry used part of this money to prepare and publish a report on the expedition in three volumes titled Narrative of the Expedition of an American Squadron to the China Seas and Japan. He was also advanced to the grade of rear-admiral on the retired list when his health began to fail as a reward for his services in the Far East.<br /><br /><strong>Condition: </strong>Wear and fading to cloth large map repair at with archival tape several others with stub tears and splitting to folds; light foxing spine ends rubbed with a few with chips corners bumped and rubbed through. Accompanied with encapsulated and graded signature of the author else good to very good. Due to the size and weight additional postage will be required.</p> A O P Nicholson hardcover
Kristian Jeppesen, FlemmiNot in perfect condition. unknown
186915392Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co. Very Good in No Dust Jacket dust jacket. 1869. First Edition. Hardcover. Original maroon cloth covered boards with light wear to extremities bottom fore corners a little bumped spine a little faded head and tail of spine a little frayed.; Tight solid book maroon end papers hinges intact frontispiece with intact tissue guard & two other engravings in section on Mormon church. Titles in gilt on spine.; Small 8vo 7½" - 8" tall; 456 pages; ``Alexander Kelly McClure January 9 1828 – June 6 1909 was a journalist editor writer politician and historian active in Pennsylvania Republican Party politics especially in the 1860s and a prominent supporter correspondent and biographer of President Abraham Lincoln.`` This book is written as two series of letters to the public one series published in the New York `Tribune` and the other in the `Franklin Repository`. Colonel J.X. Beidler Judge L.P. Williston Colonel Geo. L. Shoup Colonel Neil Howie and Colonel Wilbur L. Sanders whose faces appear on the frontispiece are encountered by McClure on his travels. Extensive section on Utah and the Mormon church. . J.B. Lippincott & Co hardcover
41Smith Elder London 1914. First Edition. Hardcover Original Cloth. Good Condition/No Dust Jacket. 1st Edition: Number 35 of a limited edition of 350. Original covers page edges gilt no dust jacket. PLEASE NOTE: Pages 16 3342434493125 and 148 are PHOTOCOPIES. Contents clean. Volume 1 & 2 were Scott's 1st "Discovery Expedition" whilst Volume 3 is from his 2nd "Terra Nova" Expedition. Although often sold as a set Volume 3 is a complete book in its' own right. The original broadsheets were produced at Cape Evans to amuse the men on the 'Terra Nova' Expedition. It was designed to be published separately from Volume 1 & 2. Cherry-Garrard was the Editor and typist and Wilson the main illustrator. The 1st issue was presented on Midwinter's Day 1911 the 2nd on 8th September and the 3rd on 15th October. Content included poetry humorous articles illustrations of sledging flags and caricatures. Includes Wilson's moving poem 'The Barrier Silence'. Copiously illustrated drawings in the text and full-page plates from sketches and paintings by E. Wilson H. Ponting and others. Spine shaken gutta-percha binding delicate some pages loose as is usual with the 1st Edition. This copy is still bright and handleable with care Gutta Percha was used as the binding glue in many early books it is not a difficult job to remove and reback using modern glues The South Polar Times was a magazine written and printed by the members of Antarctic Expeditions during the various voyages they undertook and forms what is perhaps the most personal of the printed documents to have come out of that most remarkable of periods of Antarctic adventures revealing so many often contradictory aspects of these men's various personalities. It contains a diary of the events of each month a record of the proceedings of the local Debating Society a monthly acrostic humorous notes besides articles of a more solid nature as well as stories sketches of various kinds and poems. One of the corner stones of an Antarctic collection. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 5 kilogram. Category: Arctic & Antarctic; Exploration. Pictures of this item not already displayed here available upon request. Inventory No: 41. . This book is extra heavy and may involve extra shipping charges to some countries. Smith Elder hardcover
19359030684New York: Macmillan 1935. 1st. Hardcover. Very good. Translated by Alec Brown. Bound in publisher's original blue cloth with spine and cover stamped in white. Illustrated with forty photographs drawings maps and diagrams in black-and-white. Moderate wear and fading to the extremities of cover. 6 1/4 x 9 1/4 inches. 324 pages. <br/><br/> Macmillan hardcover
1934061260Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company 1934. 1st printing. Lacking dj. Signed by Miller on title page. Also inscribed on half title page and signed there by Janet Miller and Marion Rose to whom the book was dedicated. A tight square copy in full cloth binding. Map endpapers. 299pp. Signed. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/No Dust Jacket. 8vo - 8" - 9" Tall. Houghton Mifflin Company Hardcover
1983450018Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press 1983. First Edition. Hardcover. Near fine copy in the original gilt-blocked cloth. Slightest suggestion only of dust-dulling to the panel edges. Remains well-preserved overall; tight bright clean and strong. Physical description; xxxii 527 pages : illustrations. Contents; I. The Dark Age; 1. Introduction; 2. The Architecture; 3. The Pottery; 4. The Burials; 5. The Small Finds; 6. The Dark Age at Nichoria: A Perspective; II. Archaic to Roman Times; 7. The Site and Environs; III. The Byzantine Occupation; 8. Introduction; 9. The Architecture; 10. The Pottery; 11. The Burials; 12. The Small Finds; 13. Summary; IV. Post-Byzantine Times; 14. The Site and Environs. Subjects; Excavations Archaeology Greece Nichoria Site. Nichoria Site Greece Antiquities. Greece Antiquities. Minneapolis : University of Minnesota Press hardcover
BN92096DuMont Reiseverlag. Mit der Endurance in die Antarktis: Die Bilder der dramatischen Expedition 1914-1917 Hurley Frank and Hurley Frank <br/><br/>Mit der Endurance in die Antarktis: Die Bilder der dramatischen Expedition 1914-1917 Hurley Frank and Hurley Frank Mit der Endurance in die Antarktis: Die Bilder der dramatischen Expedition 1914-1917 Hurley Frank and Hurley Frank DuMont Reiseverlag unknown
1927067310New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons 1927. Square and unmarked copy in full cloth binding that is lightly rubbed. Top edge gilt. xiv 414pp. Introduction by Roy Chapman Andrews. Plates. Fold-out map. An expedition to collect specimens for the American Museum of Natural History this is a great journey through Central Asia. India the Himalayas the Pamirs Thian Shan Mongolia Siberia across the endless steppes to Manchuria Peking Kashmir Kashgaria the "Celestial Mountains" Kara Shar Dzungaria Kobdo. First Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/No Dust Jacket. 8vo - 8" - 9" Tall. G. P. Putnam's Sons Hardcover
EXNW00004New York: Oxford University Press WYSIWYG pricing--no added shipping charge for standard shipping within USA. Both volumes: tan cloth with navy blue cloth spine blue titles on front board & gilt titles on spine color frontispiece chapter bibliographies many b & w illustrations in text index DJs in Brodart archival covers. Northern Voyages: 1971 BOMC edition xviii 712 pp chapter notes; shaken front hinge repaired previous owner's address label on fpd else fine; DJ very good extremities rubbed; in Brodart archival cover. Southern Voyages: 1974 ISBN 0-19-501823-0 xvii 758 pp footnotes; Fine/Near Fine; DJ extremities lightly rubbed. In addition to being trained as an historian Morison was a sailor and served in the U. S. Navy during World War 2. He brings a sailor's knowledge and experience to all his books on voyages and discovery "has made transatlantic voyages under sail and coasted the eastern shores of the United States and Canada; and in preparation for this book Northern Voyages he flew at low altitude in a small plane from Maine to Labrador around the Gulf of St. Lawrence and along the North Carolina Outer Banks. These personal investigations have allowed him to identify almost every place mentioned by the discoverers." From the DJ for Southern Voyages: "Admiral Morison personally retraced the routes of the explorers he writes about including every part of Magellan's voyage which forms the core of the book." He had previously in the 1930s sailed the routes taken by Columbus in his four voyages in the cases where records survived to recreate them. Fits in medium flat-rate box. Shipping weight 6 lbs. . 23½ X 16 cm. Oxford University Press Hardcover
96147502London 1922 Geographical Journal. New white stiff wrs.very good extracted article pp.218-219 3 b.w. photos 2nd art- icle by Dr. A.M. Heron: THE ROCKS OF MOUNT EVEREST pp. 219- 220 both bound in one. A vivid account of reconnaissance of Mt. Everest by Mallory Bullock & Wheeler in September 1921. A marvelous first ac- count of the climb and search for the easiest route to the top of Everest. With fabulous first photos of the Valley of the Kama Chu Mt. Everest from 19600 ft. N-53 & Makalu from 20500 ft. at the head of Kharta Valley view of the pe peak 20500 ft. at head of Kharta valley line approach by col left of AA North Peak & Northern branch of N.E. Arete. Several other fantastic early views of Everest.Great work! The appearance of articles in the Geographical Journal pre- ceede any published book. Thus these articles are likely the 'first' & earliest publication of photos & Everest notes done. unknown
96147501London 1921 Geographical Journal. New black clothvery good extracted article pages 371-377 map 7 b.w. photos. A vivid account of reconnaissance of Mt. Everest by Mallory Bullock & Wheeler in September 1921. A marvelous first ac- count of the climb and search for the easiest route to the top of Everest. With fabulous first photos of the Valley of the Kama Chu Mt. Everest from 19600 ft. N-53 & Makalu from 20500 ft. at the head of Kharta Valley view of the pe peak 20500 ft. at head of Kharta valley line approach by col left of AA North Peak & Northern branch of N.E. Arete. Several other fantastic early views of Everest.Great work! The appearance of articles in the Geographical Journal pre- ceede any published book. Thus these articles are likely the 'first' & earliest publication of photos & Everest notes done. unknown
1974102285Peking: Science Press 1974. Hardcover. good to very good. 1st Edition. unpaginated. Quarto in original gilt letterd beige cloth endpaper maps and dust jacket with colour and b&w illustrations from photos. Boards slightly bowed. good to very good Neate C43. Account of the Tibet Scientific Expedition of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. 1974 Science Press hardcover
1982145334Urumqi: Xinjiang People's Publishing House August 1982. First Edition. Hardcover. Fine/Near fine. 154 p. 276 photos mainly colour. Two small maps at front. Beige cloth in dustjacket. Light wear to jacket edges. <br/><br/> Xinjiang People's Publishing House hardcover
19824226Xinjian People's Press 1982. First Edition. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. Xinjiang People's Press 1982 presumed first edition. Fine cloth hardback in a fine unclipped dust jacket. 10.5 x 9.5 in. 154 pp. Although this book documents a scientific expedition the photos show that some members climbed quite high on this 7000m peak the highest in the Tian Shan. Xinjian People's Press hardcover
185923335Melbourne: John Ferres Government Printer. Very Good. 1859. First Edition. Paperback. Victorian Parliamentary Paper Number 1 of 1859. Stab sewn uncut in very good condition. This book is light and postage will be reduced for shipment within Australia. ; 345 x 220mm; 21 pages . John Ferres, Government Printer paperback
1818BOOKS0073902 volumes: xxiii557 pages with fold out frontispiece map and two additional maps one folding; vii550 pages with folding frontispiece map tables three maps and appendix. Octavo 8 3/4" x 5 3/4" recased with original leather boards and original spine laid on. Second edition corrected and enlarged. First published in 1817.<br /><br />Hugh Murray was a geographer. Hugh entered the Edinburgh excise office as a clerk but from the first devoted his leisure to literary pursuits publishing <i>The Swiss Emigrants</i> in 1804; two philosophical treatises <i>The Morality of Fiction</i> 1805 and <i>Enquiries respecting the Character of Nations</i> 1808; and another romance <i>Corasmin or the Minister</i> in 1814. In 1816 he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh to whose <i>Transactions</i> he contributed among other papers one in 1818 <i>On the Ancient Geography of Central and Eastern Asia with Illustrations derived from Recent Discoveries in the North of India</i>. In 1817 he enlarged and completed Dr. Leyden's <i>Historical Account of Discoveries and Travels in Africa</i>. Similar works by him on Asia and North America followed; the former being published in three volumes at Edinburgh in 1820 and the latter in London in 1829.<br /><br /><b>Condition:</b><br /><br />Recased with original leather spines and covers laid on and new end papers frontispiece map of volume one need of repair at some folds else a good to very good set. Archibald Constable & Company hardcover
1559612746.GaudioCD. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. unknown
18979761Kristiania H. Aschehoug & co 1897. Frst Norwegian Edition. Hardcover. Near fine. Royal 8vo. 526 553 3/4 cloth & marbled boards 2 v. fronts. illus. plates part col. ports. 3 color folding maps folding diagram > Rids af Fram. "Fridtjof Wedel-Jarlsberg Nansen 10 October 1861 - 13 May 1930 was a Norwegian explorer scientist diplomat humanitarian and Nobel Peace Prize laureate. In his youth he was a champion skier and ice skater. He led the team that made the first crossing of the Greenland interior in 1888 traversing the island on cross-country skis. He won international fame after reaching a record northern latitude of 86°14 during his Fram expedition of 1893-1896. Although he retired from exploration after his return to Norway his techniques of polar travel and his innovations in equipment and clothing influenced a generation of subsequent Arctic and Antarctic expeditions."wikipedia. Kristiania, H. Aschehoug & co hardcover