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500308820Milan Jeunesse Sans date. Album jeunesse illustré par Édouard Manceau publié par Milan Jeunesse centré sur le thème du jeu et de l'imagination enfantine. L'ouvrage propose une exploration ludique et poétique destinée aux jeunes lecteurs
126204Editions Paulsen - 2013 - In-4 carré, reliure pleine toile sous jaquette illustrée, signet - 329 pages - Ouvrage tiré à 1000 exemplaires, celui-ci porte le numéro 337 - Nombreuses illustrations en couleurs et en N&B, in et hors texte, dans l'ouvrage
5307in 12 broché titre,190 pages,1 page de catalogue Germer Baillière & Cie Bibliothèque utile XLI rousseurs éparse, plus fortes en début et fin de volume
32683Paris, Presses de la Cité, 1971. 14 x 21, 314 pp., plusieurs illustrations et cartes, cartonnage d'édition + jaquette, bon état.
19901223691990 Editions du Seuil - 1990 - In-Folio, cartonnage toilé décoré à froid sous jaquette illustrée - 195 pages - Illustrations en couleurs et N&B, in et hors-texte, dans l'ouvrage
1867VOEK0219cBln., Hempel 1867. Lex.-8°, XII, 552 S., mit 1 Titelbild und 326 Holzschnitten, HLdr. d. Zt., marmor. Schnitt, berieben, Ecken etwas bestoß., Leder beschabt,, neue Vorsätze., im vord. Bereich etw. wasserrandig, vereinzelt Text gebräunt. (= Der Erdball un d seine Naturwunder. 2. Bd.).
1865VOEK0219aBln., Hempel 1865. Lex.-8°, XV, 784 S., mit 123 Abb. u. Karten, 1 farblithogr. Front., HLdr. d. Zt., berieben, Ecken etwas bestoß., Leder beschabt, kl. Loch am Rpckenschwanz, neue Vorsätze, schwach stockfleck., vereinzelt kl. Schmutzstellen. (= Der Erdball un d seine Naturwunder. 4. Bd.).
196721321967 Paris Université de Paris Palais de la découverte 1966 Un volume in°12 broché 39 pages LR30
76 pages. Features: Lovely Franklin Arbuckle cover illustration of couple admiring winter view of Peyto Lake at Banff National Park; Nostalgic Canadian Pacific colour ad inside front cover features young lady looking forward to seeing Canada by train; One-page DeSoto ad features a maroon Custom; Pay-Off in Oil - Leduc, Alberta has been stampeded by roughnecks after the recent discovery of oil; Labor War is Civil War - article by Charles Luckman of Lever Brothers Company in the U.S.; Marigold Spring (fiction); E.K. Brown explains his Ontario - rich but repressed, powerful but timid, and disliked but loved by her own; Bell's Sweet Singers - Dr. Leslie Bell conducts the 60 lovely girls of the Ontario College of Education choir - article with nice photos; Divorce - a Racket and a Scandal; Excellent colour-photo Campbell's soup ad features attractive housweife in front of a wall of soup cans; Nice colour Waterman's Taperite pen ad; When the Crowd Roars - Ted Reeve conjours up the biggest thrills of 40 years in sport; Guardian of the Clock (fiction); Flying Railwayman - New head of CPR is W.M. Neal, who rose from office boy to President; Article on mosquitoes by Max Braithwaite; The Faraway Music Company (fiction); Wonderful one-page colour White Rose gas station ad shows vehicles lined up for service; Colour photo Caterpillar ad shows highway excavation in progress, with tarp protecting crawler operator from the cold; Nice back cover Coke ad features young lady with 'come hither' look gazing down from porch. Complete and unmarked with moderate wear. A well-preserved copy of this wonderful vintage issue. Book
69442aafTokyo, Kenkokukinenjigiyo-Kyokai, 1936, in-8vo, XIII + 291 p. + 70 photogr. plates / IX + 305 p. + 60 photogr. plates, orig. cloth., with DJ and orig. slipcase.
27673, brepols, 2011 Hardback with dusjacket, 312 p., 237 b/w ill. 48 colour ill., 210 x 297 mm, Languages: English. new, fine condition !. ISBN 9782503525693.
2017VOY4425MPoche, 416 pages, paru le 18 mai 2017 chez Chandeigne, livre en très bon état général, proche du neuf. Nous avons d'autres exemplaires des éditions Chandeigne, retrouvez les dans notre catalogue grâce au mot-clé "Chandeigne".
2013VOY4434MRelié, 418 pages, paru le 17 mai 2013 chez Chandeigne, livre en très bon état général. Nous avons d'autres exemplaires des éditions Chandeigne, retrouvez les dans notre catalogue grâce au mot-clé "Chandeigne".
2007930632007 Association Culturelle des Sanctuaires de Saint-Irénée et Saint-Just - 2007 - In-4 broché, couverture illustrée en couleurs - 191 p. - Illustrations en couleurs et N&B et hors texte
3839traduit de l’allemand par Elise Voïart précédé d’une introduction par Charles NODIER.Grand in 8 demi-chagrin rouge à nerfs,titre,filets et caissons dorés,plats percaline chagrinée avec 3 filets à froid en encadrement.Faux-titre,frontispice,titre avec vignette,XIII,562 pages,tranches dorées;200 vignettes dans et hors texte d’après les dessins de M.Charles LEMERCIER Garnier frères libraires éditeurs sans date,rousseurs éparses habituelles,bonne édition
219 pages including bibliography and black and white illustrations. "Rich in information about our past, from European discovery to settlement, the creation of the townsite, incorporation, and the development of the modern town, while preserving its village character." - Jack Collins, Mayor, Qualicum Beach. Clean and unmarked. Very light wear. Excellent copy. Book
185545031Paris Victor Masson 1855. 8vo. Without wrappers. In 'Annales de Chimie et de Physique' Series 3 tome 30 December-issue. With halftitle to vol. 30. Pp. 385-508 a. 1 plate. Entire issue offered. Wurtz's paper: pp. 443-506. <br/><br/><em>First appearance of the entire memoir in which Wurtz describes his outstanding discovery of Liebig’s prediction that there might be organic compounds analogous to ammonia and derivable from it by the replacement of hydrogen - the amines. The discovery was announced in 1849 and a small extract was printed in "Comptes rendu" 4 pp. The offered paper is the memoir in full.Wurtz is most noted for his investigation of glycols and for his discovery of the amines. The latter discovery in 1849 the paper offered was very significant at the time for ot suggested the possibility of a new type the ammonia type which helped to explain the behaviour of nitrogenous compounds. Leicester & Klickstein "A Source Book." pp. 362-63. - Parkinson "Breakthroughs" 1849 C.Charles Adolphe Wurtz was born at Strasbourg 1817. For many years he was Professor of Chemistry at the Ecole de Médicine and at Sorbonne in Paris. He was known not only for his researches in organic chemistry but also for his many literary works. He was editor of a Dictionnaire de Chemie Pure et Appliquée and after 1868 one of the editors of the Annalen der Chemie et de Physique. He died in Paris in 1884. </em> unknown
184947031Paris Bachelier 1849. 4to. No wrappers. In: "Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences" Tome 28 No 7. Pp. 189-240 entire issue offered. Wurtz's paper: pp. 223-226. <br/><br/><em>First appearance of the announcement of Wurtz's outstanding discovery of Liebig’s prediction that there might be organic compounds analogous to ammonia and derivable from it by the replacement of hydrogen - the amines. The entire memoir was not published in full until 1855 in 'Annales de Chimie et de Physique'.Wurtz is most noted for his investigation of glycols and for his discovery of the amines. The latter discovery in 1849 the paper offered was very significant at the time for ot suggested the possibility of a new type the ammonia type which helped to explain the behaviour of nitrogenous compounds. Leicester & Klickstein "A Source Book." pp. 362-63. - Parkinson "Breakthroughs" 1849 C. </em> unknown
321 pages including bibliography and index. The history of the pre-Klonkike era, as recorded in the journals, letters, reports, and books of the first Europeans to penetrate the American northwest. Dabs of liquid paper upon title page. Sticker scar on front cover. Average wear. Book
196721341967 Paris Université de Paris Palais de la découverte 1966 Un volume in°12 broché 22 pages LR30
196721421967 Paris Université de Paris Palais de la découverte 1962 Un volume in°12 broché 44 pages LR30
2008500093551Gallimard 2008 72 pages 22 2x1 2x28 2cm. 2008. Broché. 72 pages.
180442469London Bulwer and Co. 1804. 4to. Without wrappers as extracted from "Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London." Year 1804-Part II. Pp. 419-430. Clean and fine. <br/><br/><em>First appearance of the paper in which Wollaston announced his discovery of the metallic element Rhodium."Dr. Wollaston dissolved a portion of crude platinum in qgua regia and neutralized the excess acid with caustic soda. He then added salammoniac to precipitate the platinum as ammonium chloroplatinate and mercurous cyanide to precipitate the palladium as palladium cyanide. After filteringoff the precipitate he decomposed the excess mercurous cyanide inthe filtarate by adding hydrochloric acid and evaporating to dryness. When he washed the residue with alcohol everything dissolved except a beautiful dark red powder which proved to be a double chloride of sodium and a new metal which because of the rose color of its salts Dr. Wollaston named 'Rhodium'. He found that the sodium rhodium chloride could be easely reduced by heating it in a current of hydrogen and that after the sodium chloride had been washed out the rhodium remained as a metallic powder. he also succeeded in obtaining a rhodium button."Weeks: Discovery of the Elements. p. 104-05. </em> unknown
183748086Paris Crochard et Comp. 1837. Orig. printed wrappers. No backstrip. In: "Annales de Chimie et de Physique Par MM. Gay-Lussac et Arago." tome 64 Cahier 2 Fevrier 1837. Pp. 113-224. Entire issue offered with printed wrappers. Wöhler a. Liebig's papers: pp. 185-209 a. pp. 209-217. <br/><br/><em>First appearance of this classic paper in organic chemistry in which Wöhler and Liebig showed how Amygdalin could be decomposed by a vegetable emulsion the first example of a glycoside. The papers were issued at the same time in "Annalen der Physik und Chemie"."The conclusions which you have drawn from the investigation of bitter-almond oil" wrote Berzelius to Liebig and Wöhler "are certainly the most importent which have so far been reached in the domain of vegetable chemistry and give promise of shedding an unexpected light over this part of the science.The facts which you have set forth inspire such reflections that they may be regarded as the dawn of a new day in vegetable chemistry."Berzelius-Wöhler Briefwechsel."During the years that Liebig was preoccupied with the ether theory and with organic acids he also carried out two importent investigations with Wöhler. In october 1836 Wöhler wrote that he had discovered a way to transform amygdalin to oil of bitter almonds and hydrocyanid acis by distilling it with manganese and sulfuric acid and he invited Liebig to join in pursuing the topic. Two days later he made a more remarkable discovery. It had occurred to him that perhaps thetransformation of amygdalin could be effected by the albumin in the almonds in a manner similar to the action of yeast in sugar.Wöhler suspected that the decomposition was an example of what Berzelius had recently defined as catalysis. Liebig and Wöhler then divided up the detailed examination of the properties and composition of amygdalin. They precipitated from the emulsion of almonds a substance which when dissolved retain its action. They named the active substance "emulsion". Its effectiveness in very small quantities confirmed that it acted like yeast."DSB VIII p. 342. </em> unknown
183743739Leipzig Johann Ambrosius Barth 1837. Without wrappers as issued in "Annalen der Physik und Chemie. Hrsg.von Poggendorff" Bd. 41 Zweites Stück. Entire issue No 6 offered. Titlepage to vol. 41. Pp. 225-448 a. 2 folded engraved plates. Wöhler & Liebig's papers: pp. 345-366 pp. 366-374 a. pp. 393-397. Clean and fine. <br/><br/><em>First appearance of this classic paper in organic chemistry in which Wöhler and Liebig showed how Amygdalin could be decomposed by a vegetable emulsion the first example of a glycoside."The conclusions which you have drawn from the investigation of bitter-almond oil" wrote Berzelius to Liebig and Wöhler "are certainly the most importent which have so far been reached in the domain of vegetable chemistry and give promise of shedding an unexpected light over this part of the science.The facts which you have set forth inspire such reflections that they may be regarded as the dawn of a new day in vegetable chemistry."Berzelius-Wöhler Briefwechsel."During the years that Liebig was preoccupied with the ether theory and with organic acids he also carried out two importent investigations with Wöhler. In october 1836 Wöhler wrote that he had discovered a way to transform amygdalin to oil of bitter almonds and hydrocyanid acis by distilling it with manganese and sulfuric acid and he invited Liebig to join in pursuing the topic. Two days later he made a more remarkable discovery. It had occurred to him that perhaps thetransformation of amygdalin could be effected by the albumin in the almonds in a manner similar to the action of yeast in sugar.Wöhler suspected that the decomposition was an example of what Berzelius had recently defined as catalysis. Liebig and Wöhler then divided up the detailed examination of the properties and composition of amygdalin. They precipitated from the emulsion of almonds a substance which when dissolved retain its action. They named the active substance "emulsion". Its effectiveness in very small quantities confirmed that it acted like yeast."DSB VIII p. 342. </em> unknown