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2021500083932LIB DES ECOLES 2021 96 pages 17x21 9x0 8cm. 2021. Broché. 96 pages.
2021500092565LIB DES ECOLES 2021 96 pages 17x21 9x0 8cm. 2021. Broché. 96 pages.
2006500339983Tourbillon 2006 181 pages 22 4x2 4x22 6cm. 2006. Broché. 181 pages. Cet album jeunesse utilise plus de 150 photographies de l'agence Magnum prises aux quatre coins du monde pour illustrer des verbes de la vie quotidienne et aider les enfants de 4 à 7 ans à enrichir leur vocabulaire. Les images choisies pour leur force narrative et leurs détails mettent en scène des situations insolites drôles poétiques ou exotiques de la vie de tous les jours
2000500153843Editions Gallimard 2000 21 8x1x28 4cm. 2000. Relié.
170 pages. Colour frontis. Black and white plates. "This is a fascinating book, a beautiful book, a magnificent memorial to the pioneer period with which it deals." - From dust jacket. Prior owner's details atop front free endpaper else unmarked. Average wear. Dust jacket now preserved in archival-grade Brodart cover. A sound working copy. Wallace p.119. Book
No inscriptions or marks. A lovely clean very tight copy with bright unmarked boards and no bumping to corners. Dust jacket not price clipped or torn with traces of handling. 311pp. This book tells the stories of some of the explorers who vied with each other to be the first to reach the North Pole, sometimes losing their lives and for whom it was the most important thing of all. To quote Robert Edwin Peary - 'a few toes aren't much to give to achieve the Pole'. Plates and maps.
196721431967 Paris Université de Paris Palais de la découverte 1961 Un volume in°12 broché 26 pages LR30
79635Paris, Gallimard, 1988. 15 x 22, 323 pp., nombreuses illustrations et cartes en couleurs, broché, bon état.
79636Paris, Gallimard, 1990. 15 x 22, 318 pp., nombreuses illustrations et cartes en couleurs, broché, bon état.
79638Paris, Gallimard, 1989. 15 x 22, 297 pp., nombreuses illustrations et cartes en couleurs, broché, très bon état.
19866427ENAL 1986 129 pages in8. 1986. broché. 129 pages. Pièce de théâtre algérienne militante qui dépeint un conflit atroce et sans illusion où le massacre ne cesse qu'avec la victoire de la Révolution. Elle évoque le peuple sortant de son mutisme rageur après avoir été bâillonné
19081193901908 A Genève, Atar, S. A., éditeur - Extrait de l'Annuaire du conservatoire et du jardin botaniques de Genève, 11ème et 12ème années, 1907-1908 - 1908 - In-8, broché - 8 p. - 2 planches hors texte en fin d'ouvrage
19775891977 - reliure - Les Editions du Pacifique, Papeete - 1977 - Fort in-4 (28,5 x 22,5 cm) reliure pleine toile sous jaquette illustrée de l'éditeur - 340 pages - Très riche iconographie en couleur et noir et blanc. Photographies, illustrations et reproductions - ISBN : 2-85700-070-7 - Version française de Gilles ARTUR - Texte mis au point par Michel-Claude TOUCHARD
200025941NY: Margaret K. McElderry Books. Near Fine in Fine dust jacket. 2000. Hardcover. 0689839871 . Illustrated by Robert Andrew Parker. First printing. About fine in a fine dust jacket. . Margaret K. McElderry Books hardcover books
184342662London Richard and John E. Taylor 1843. 4to. No wrappers as extracted from "Philosophical Transactions" 1843 - Part I. Pp. 1-6. <br/><br/><em>First appearance of a pioneer-paper in the history of early photography as Herschel here for the first time describes his discovery of the iron printing process with ammonio-citrate of iron by both methods namely with blue lines on a white background and white lines on a blue ground. </em> unknown
184242843London Richard and John E. Taylor 1842. 4to. No wrappers as extracted from "Philosophical Transactions" 1842 - Part II. Pp. 181-214 and one double-page folded engraved plate. <br/><br/><em>First appearance of a pioneer-paper in the history of early photography in which Herschel announced some of his importent discoveries of the photographic printing processes the process of photographic contact-printing in Prussian blue brought to light just three years after Louis Daguerre and Henry Talbot had announced their independent inventions of photography in silver using metal and paper substrates respectively. and the photographic properties of red ferro sesquicyanuret of potassium."This is the first recorded observation of Prussian blue being formed for a photographic purpose by the action of light on potassium ferricyanide so it represents the moment of discovery of the first cyanotype process although this name still lay in the future. The significance of this observation impressed Herschel sufficiently to mention it also in his general diary entry for 23 April 1842."Mike Ware in "John Herschel's Cyanotype. Invention or discovery ". </em> unknown
180143599Halle Rengerschen Buchhandlung 1801. Without wrappers as published in "Annalen der Physik. Herausgegeben von Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert" Bd. 7 Zweites Stück. The entire issue offered =Heft 2. Pp. 137-264 a. 2 folded engraved plates. Herschels papers: pp. 137-156. The plate depicts Herschel's experimental arrangements. <br/><br/><em>First appearance in German of Herschel's epochal announcement of his discovery of infrared light in 1800. This was the first time that a form of light beyond visible light had been detected. The paper offered is the German translation of the main parts of Herschel's paper "An Investigation of the Powers of Prismatic Colours to Heat and Illuminate Objects"."In 1800 he tested various portions of the sun's spectrum by thermometer to see if he could find interesting differences in the amount of heat the different colors delivered. He did but in a rather unexpected way for he found that the temperature rise was highest in no color at all at a spot beyond the red end of the spectrum. He concluded that the sunlight contained invisible light beyond the red. This is now called infrared radiation. The following year Ritter was to extend the visible spectrum in the other direction."Asimov.Parkinson "Breakthroughs" 1800 P. </em> unknown
3490in 8 demi-chagrin marron foncé à 4 nerfs et à coins,titre fers,roulette dorés,filet à froid sur les plats.Titre, cartes montée sur onglet,186 pages non rogné,194 héliogravures pleine page et dans le texte,B Arthaud 1937 couverture en couleurs de Louis GARIN conservée.un des exemplaires numérotés sur Hollande B.F.K de rives au filigrane de la collection,n°28/150 seul grand papier. Rousseurs éparse,plus fortes en début et fin de volume, bien relié
12477HERUBEL Marcel- En suivant les côtes de DUNKERQUE à SAINT NAZAIRE. In 8 broché, couverture illustrée en couleurs, faux-titre, titre XX, 284 pages, illustrations photos hors-texte. Pierre ROGER & Cie éditeurs Rousseurs, plus concentrées à certaines pages. CAMBON Victor. Lyon, Saint Etienne, Grenoble, Dijon. Faux-titre, titre, illustrations photos hors-texte, 1 carte dépliante. (carte des grandes usines hydrauliques dans les Alpes françaises ;) Rousseurs, principalement en début et fin de volume. Pierre ROGER & Cie éditeur Les deux volumes
6695in 12 pleine toile verte d’éditeur,titre doré au dos et sur le premier plat,filets noir en encadrement.Faux-titre, titre,XII,621 page,non rogné.Deuxième édition revue et augmentée avec 273 figures intercalées dans le texte.J.B Baillière & fils 1884,reliure légèrement frottée quelques traces de manipulations en fin de volume tamons de bibliothèque
500367197LIVRE DE POCHE Sans date. Premier roman d'Hermann Hesse Peter Camenzind raconte l'histoire d'un jeune paysan alpin qui poussé par son amour de la nature et sa quête de sens voyage à travers l'Europe. Le livre explore les thèmes chers à l'auteur : la passion de la nature la méfiance envers la société la nostalgie de l'enfance et la recherche d'une identité spirituelle
180143599Halle, Rengerschen Buchhandlung, 1801. Without wrappers as published in ""Annalen der Physik. Herausgegeben von Ludwig Wilhelm Gilbert"", Bd. 7, Zweites Stück. The entire issue offered (=Heft 2). Pp. 137-264 a. 2 folded engraved plates. Herschels papers: pp. 137-156. The plate depicts Herschel's experimental arrangements.
1914WOC-2234Berichte der deutschen Zentralafrica=Expedition 1910/1911. Mit 512 buten und einfarbigen Abbildungen nach Photographien und Zeichnugen, sowie mit 6 karten. Esther Band. Leipzig, F. A. Brocklaus, 1914. 2 volumes grands in-8 (23,5x4x16cm) pleine toile bordeaux, plats supérieurs imprimé en blanc et ornés de vignettes en couleurs, dos lisses imprimés et un peu passés. X,324pp. + X,398pp.
183547003Philadelphia Fraklin Institute 1835. 8vo. Later full green cloth. Tome-and titlelabels in leather with gilt lettering on spine. In: "Journal of the Franklin Institute of the State of Pennsylvania. Edited by Thomas P. Jones" Vol. XV. New series. Engraved frontisp. 2446 pp. 2 folded engraved plates and 2 folded engraved maps. Entire volume offered. Henry's announcement: pp. 169-70. A stamp to verso of frontispiece Library of Congress duplicate stamp. <br/><br/><em>First printing of this importent paper the first to describe in detail how the phenomena of Self-Induction was discovered. Henry discovered the induction phenomena - how an electric current in one coil may set up a current in the other through the development of the magnetic field - independently of Faraday but Faraday was first to publish on electromagnetic induction. Henry's experiments with induction led him to his importent discovery of SELF-INDUCTION which is the phenomenon in which a change in electric current in a coil produces an induced emf in the coil itself. This phenomenon was also discovered inependently by Faraday but this time Henry had published first. The basic unit of inductance was to be called "the Henry". Relevant to the controversy between Faraday and Henry is the following statement by A D Bache Secretary of the American Philosophical Society introducing an abstract of Henry in J Franklyn Inst. 1835 pp. 169-70 H. Norman 1053 and the paper offerd: "A memoir on this subject has been since submitted to the Society containing an extension of the subject the primary fact in relation to which was observed by Professor Henry as early as 1832 and announced by him in the American Journal of Science. Mr. Faraday having recently entered upon a similar train of observations the immediate publication of the accompanying is important that the prior claims of our fellow countryman may not be overlooked."Spark Museum.Magee "Source Book in Physics" p. 515. </em> hardcover
183747418London Richard and John E. Taylor 1837. No wrappers. Extracted fron "Scientific Memoirs selected from The Transactions of Foreign Academies of Science and Learned Societies. Edited by Richard Taylor." Vol. I. Pp. 540-547. <br/><br/><em>Henry's milestone paper announcing his discovery of electrical self-induction. "Henry independently discovered electro-magnetic induction and in this paper announced his discovery of electric self-induction one of the prime properies of an electro-magnetic circuit. Henry was an eminent experimenter but was casual in publishing his findings with resulting lack of recognition of his contributions."Bern Dibner.Dibner "Heralds of Sciece" No.63.It was also printed the same year in "Transactions of the American Philosophical Society New Series Vol. 5". The paper was later printed in "Philosophical Magazine" 1840."The direction of Henry’s thought became somewhat apparent in his 1835 paper refers to the papers reading before the American Phil. Soc. febr. 6th 1835 on the action of a spiral conductor in increasing the intensity of galvanic currents. The paper started out as an affirmation of Henry’s priority in the discovery of self-induction. He then combined induction proper using Faraday’s findings and his own with selfinduction to show how these produce a pattern of repulsions yielding an increased effect in spirals. He specifically linked these “magneto-electrical†results to the principles of static induction developed by Cavendish and Poisson. This explanation was then applied to Savary’s report of changes of polarity when magnetic needles were placed at varying distances from a wire in which a current was being transmitted "Mémoire sur l’aimantation" in Annales de chimie et de physique 34 1827. That is currents appeared periodically in the air surrounding a current-bearing straight wire as a result of the actions of induction and self-induction." DSB.Wheeler Gift: 2724-2725a. </em> unknown