27 résultats
196947791London: Victor Gollancz Ltd. 1969. 8vo. 159 1 pp. Maps photo plates. Blue boards gilt lettering w/ d.j. slight scuffing price-clipped minor shelfwear NF/VG copy. First edition of this fascinating diary from the man who served under Scott with the tragic British Antarctic expedition to the South Pole from 1910-1913. This diary chronicles Lashly’s efforts as Chief Stoker demonstrating unusual powers of observation and excellent mechanical and practical skills as part of the expedition. It has been said that if Scott had taken Lashly all the way to the South Pole the whole story could have been different. Victor Gollancz, Ltd., hardcover
42306United States Navy. 1948. Washington D.C. Hydrographic Office under authority of the Secretary of the Navy. 1948 & 1950. Sizes: - 1 53 x 80cm - 2 50 x 65cm. - 3 65 x 50cm . 50" x 20" folded: 24 x 14 cm some colour British & Norwegian charts 3 maps as a lot all in fine condition ar. The United States Navy carried out Antarctic expeditions in 1946/47 U.S. Naval Task Force 68 and 1947/48 Ronne Antarctic Research Expedition. The maps show the former in great detail and include overviews by British Admiralty & Norwegian charts. United States Navy. 1948. Washington, D.C. Hydrographic Office under authority of the Secretary of the Navy. 1948 & 1950 unknown
2010823 Denning Road N. W. London . On letterhead of the Athenaeum club Pall Mall. 13 October 1904. 2pp. 12mo. In good condition lightly aged. A tantalizing extract from a correspondence. He begins: 'I doubt whether domestic service as a rule is quite the state of slavery you depict but as I said before the question which you ask me is less simple than you appear to think and I can only say that every employer is bound to remember that those he or she employs has wants bodily and spiritual very similar to his own.' He concludes the letter and the correspondence by apologising that he 'cannot continue to write on the subject'. 23 Denning Road, N. W. [ London ]. On letterhead of the Athenaeum club, Pall Mall. 13 October 1904. unknown
193762160London: Produced by the Author and published for him by Chatto & Windus 1937. Thick 8vo. lxiv 585 1 pp. With four large folding maps numerous plates. Gray-blue publisher’s cloth black lettering front cover & spine minor shelfwear sunning & toning to spine minor bumping to corners still VG- copy from the library of Tom Koenninger 1932-2010 former editor managing editor journalist for The Columbian newspaper and board member on the Vancouver National Historic Trust. First One-Volume edition of Cherry-Garrard’s account of the disastrous Robert Falcon Scott’s ill-fated expedition to the South Pole drawing on his own account and experiences as well as the diaries of his compatriots. Cherry-Garrard and the rest of the rescue crew discovered Scott only 11 miles from their depot frozen to death with Bowers and Wilson. Produced by the Author and published for him by Chatto & Windus, hardcover
1906ANTARCTI024617William Blackwood Edinburgh and London. 1906. First edition. Prefatory Note by William S. Bruce. Octavo. pp xxiv 375. Numerous black-and-white photographs; two folding maps one at rear. Original slate-grey pictorial cloth lettered in white. An account of the Scottish Antarctic Expedition 1902-1905. Peter Speak author of William Speirs Bruce: Polar Explorer and Scottish Nationalist 2003 describes the expedition as "by far the most cost-effective and carefully planned scientific expedition of the Heroic Age" and yet it received no formal honour or recognition from the British government and its members were denied even the prestigious Polar Medal. A major achievement of the expedition was the cataloguing of more than 1100 species of animal life 212 of them previously unknown to science. R.H. Rudmose Brown was the chief botanist. Presentation copy inscribed on the half-title page: "With the kind regards of R.N. Rudmose Brown" and with a short inscription on the headed notepaper of The University Sheffield: "To Mr Hendrickson with happy memories of a day in Green Harbour - R N Rudmose Brown". The recipient Peder Leonard Henrickson 1859-1932 was a harpooner and because of his extensive experience of hunting in Arctic waters was taken on by Fridjof Nansen for the 1893-6 Norwegian Polar Expedition on board the Fram. J. Arthur Bain in his Fridtjof Nansen: His Life and Explorations 1895 describes him thus: "He is a tall square-built man of exceptional physical powers which have often been severely tested. When off Novaya Zemlya in 1888 the schooner Enigheden of Christiansund on which he was harpooner became a total wreck. The storm continuing he was compelled to remain on deck for several days during which he was literally encased in ice. He at last managed to crawl ashore and report says 'was able to thaw and dry his clothes.' His herculean strength has enabled him to endure all hardships and he entered on his latest voyage with an iron constitution and strong resolve." Green Harbour or Gr�nfjorden in Norwegian lies on the southern side of Isfjorden on Spitsbergen's west coast. Rudmose Brown published a book Spitsbergen: An Account of Exploration Hunting the Mineral Riches & Future Potentialities of an Arctic Archipelago 1920 and presumably he met Hendricksen during the course of his researches. Most of the white enamel lettering on the spine had flaked off but is intact together with the illustration on the upper cover. Three closed tears to the folds of the last large map about 5-6cm each. Bump to top corner of front cover. Top corner of the text block of the first few pages slightly bumped. Overall a very good copy indeed. William Blackwood, Edinburgh and London. hardcover
189316325London: Royal Geographic Society 1893. Hardcover. Important material on the Great Barrier Reef Antarctica Peary in the Arctic with map: "Map showing Route of the North Greenland Expedition of 1891-2. Lieut. R. E. Peary US Navy" and Indochina including: Journeys in French Indo-china Tongking Annam Cochin China Cambodia by George N. Curzon; The Physical Geography of Antarctica; Lieut. Peary's Arctic Work by Cyrus Adams; A Voyage Toward the Antarctic Sea September 1892 to June 1893; The Great Barrier Reef of Australia by Henry O. Forbes. Three quarter black leather and black boards gilt title to red spine label; spine label slt loosened. Internally bookplate of W. Bickford-Smith inside front cover. Royal Geographic Society hardcover
B9781258642105Hardback. New. hardcover
1258646323.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1258642107.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
196363517New York: Holt Rinehart & Winston 1963. 8vo. 135 5 pp. Frontisp. numerous illustrations. Blue pictorial cloth illustration & lettering in black w/ d.j. wraparound cover art by Geer minor chipping at foot of spine minor scuffing couple minor closed tears still NF/G copy. First edition stated of this Junior Science-Fiction Novel by the noted science fiction author set against the backdrop of espionage and adventure in the future under Antarctica. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, hardcover
0243594623.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0243928629.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0282235531.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0666469059.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1908ANTARCTI006997The Scottish Oceanographical Laboratory Edinburgh. 1908. First edition. Edited with an Editorial Note by William S. Bruce. Quarto. pp xiv 103 1 errata. Colour frontispiece by William Smith; 33 plates containing 100 photographs by the editor and the authors; two maps at rear. Original brown gilt decorated cloth. Although this was described as "by far the most cost-effective and carefully planned scientific expedition of the Heroic Age" Bruce received no formal honour or recognition from the British Government and the expedition's members were denied the prestigious Polar Medal. Very good indeed. The Scottish Oceanographical Laboratory, Edinburgh. hardcover
1245021281.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1903ZB1340201Anvers: Imprimerie J.-E. Buschmann 1903. Price HAS BEEN REDUCED by 10% until Monday June 29 SALE item 47 pp. drawings within the text; rebound in early 20th century boards & cloth backstrip book plate to the front paste down covers worn else internally clean and tight. - If you are reading this this item is actually physically in our stock and ready for shipment once ordered. We are not bookjackers. Buyer is responsible for any additional duties taxes or fees required by recipient's country. Photos available upon request. Anvers: Imprimerie J.-E. Buschmann hardcover
1957186938Japan: Koide Nobuhirosha c.1957. A charming set of playing cards based on the film Nankyoku Tairiku "The South Pole" recounting the story of the 1956-57 Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition. The cards show scenes of penguins the research ship Soya and the expedition members. In 1955 the Japanese government announced plans to send a research group to Antarctica in the following year. A team of 53 scientists led by Professor Nagata Takeshi set off on 8 November 1956 the first time Japan had explored the south pole since the early 1900s. They set up the Syowa Station on East Ongul Island before being emergency airlifted out of a storm. A documentary film focusing on the expedition was released in June 1957 directed by Hayashida Shigeo and titled Nihon nankyoku chiiki kansokutai no kiroku: Nankyoku Tairiku. This game was released to complement the film. Karuta is a traditional Japanese matching game where each pictorial card is assigned a letter of the Japanese alphabet and must be paired with an associated poem sentence or proverb. The player who can make the most matches wins. 90 playing cards 61 x 81 mm landscape or portrait 45 with colour photographic illustrations on one side 45 lettered in black on one side. Housed in original pictorial box 170 x 132 x 35 mm lettered in red and black. Lacking instructional booklet. Cards a little toned and bowed; box scuffed with minor loss in places bottom with some damp-staining remains of plastic wrap on lid verso old repairs in places: a very good example. Galbraith p. 133. unknown
19685022Antarctica 1968. Very good. 65pp. report typed on rectos only plus 28 leaves illustrated with eighty-six black-and-white mounted photographs each approximately 5 x 7 inches most accompanied by typed paper caption strips plus three loose photographs. Quarto. Original pressboard wrappers with metal spine fastener with printed title leaf pasted to front board. Minor wear to binding photos in generally nice condition. A typed report accompanied by detailed photographs documenting the 1967-1968 projects carried out by U.S. Naval Construction Battalion Unit 201 in Antarctica dubbed "Deep Freeze '68." The projects involved the upgrading and expansion of facilities at McMurdo Station and Palmer Station including water sewer and energy infrastructure improvements and laboratory and living-quarters construction. The original photographs here provide more than eighty-five detailed and well-captioned views of Antarctic construction architecture and engineering involved in the execution of “Deep Freeze ‘68†with sixty-five pages of typed reports providing a dense written summary in support of the project.<br /> <br /> Battalion Unit 201 had been newly established in 1967 as a Seabee unit specializing solely in Antarctic construction to continue supporting the series of "Operation Deep Freeze" missions first headed by Admiral Richard E. Byrd in the 1950s to establish a permanent research infrastructure on the then-largely unexplored Antarctic continent. Plagued by material shortages and the savage regional climate Unit 201 was disbanded at the end of “Deep Freeze ‘71†as the brief building season made the continuation of a dedicated Antarctic construction unit unfeasible. unknown
190258788Anvers Buschmann 1902. Large4to. In later full cloth with gilt lettering to spine. Leaves reinforced in margin and title-page with repair in inner margin and a few stains. 16 pp. hardcover
2007L3 b77 b661 L2 b69 ur<p>Four Travel Journals: The Americas Antarctica and Africa 1775-1874 The Hakluyt Society Series Third No.18. Edited by Herbert K. Beals R. J. Campbell Ann Savours Anita McConnell Roy Bridges. Published by Asbgate for The Hakluyt Society 2007. Hardcover 414 pp.</p> The Hakluyt Society. hardcover
1935186607Little America Antarctica: 1935. One of the 153217 pieces of mail brought to Antarctica during the Second Byrd Antarctic Expedition and mailed back to the US. Members of the public could pay 53 cents to have their mail bearing a specially produced stamp and postmark brought south on the expedition's ships and cancelled at Little America. Envelopes were sent from America in two batches. A representative of the postmaster general arrived in Little America in late 1934 with a cancelling machine and the second batch set up a post office and processed all the mail ready for return. "Cancelled mail was wrapped in waterproof paper packed in cartons encased in two heavy mail sacks and locked. It was then stored in a tent outdoors waiting to be loaded on to the next ship. Determined to cancel all the mail Anderson slept only eighteen hours in sixteen days" "Byrd Antarctic Issue". This example was paid for by Sibyl Ann Schaeffer 1899-1971 of Helena Montana and addressed to her mother's address nearby. The enclosed letter is to her young children: "It is great fun to tell you from the 'bottom' of the World that I love you more than I can ever tell you." Accompanying the message is a typewritten poem "Grapenut Cocktail with Cold Byrd." Stamped and franked expedition cover 93 x 165 mm with accompanying letter on 2 onionskin sheets 280 x 215 mm each typed one side only first sheet with handwritten message. Light toning and marking to envelope letters creased at edges: a very good group. "Byrd Antarctic Issue" Smithsonian National Postal Museum. unknown
68-7273Paris France: Expedition Antarctique Francaise 1967. Autographed post card. 10.5 x 15 cm. Very Good. En Francais. [Paris, France: Expedition Antarctique Francaise, 1967] unknown
19679304Buenos Aires 1967. First edition. Hardcover. Small 4to. 120pp ills in text. Blue buckram covers w/ title on cover. VG condition. Not in Spence. General description made for the army with pages at back to enter notes. Includes an excellent reference on voyages to the Argentine Antarctic esp. the early Spanish voyages. hardcover
a76223Washington 1969 Defense Mapping Agency. Oblong 4to. 923pp. original illustrated wraps. Light non-circulating library marks no spine numbers no pocket no bookplate. VG. . paperback