20 résultats
1963S7908Washington D.C.:: National Academy of Sciences 1963. 1963. Thick 8vo. 108 compounds described to supplement the publication Specifications and Criteria for Biochemical Compounds figs. Cloth ring binder. Ownership rubber stamps and signature of Norman Horowitz. FINE. National Academy of Sciences, 1963. hardcover books
199822393Princeton: Princeton University Press. As New in As New dust jacket. 1998. Hardcover. 0691016879 . First printing. As new in like dust jacket. . Princeton University Press hardcover books
200434086Washington:: American Chemical Society. As New. 2004. Hardcover. 0841238243 . First edition. As new in glossy illustrated boards. No dust jacket as issued. . American Chemical Society, hardcover books
197424297NY:: Kodansha International. Near Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 1974. Hardcover. 0870112287 . Color and black and white photographs. First edition. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket. ; 239 pages . Kodansha International, hardcover books
191011166Scranton: International Textbook Company 1910. Red half-leather with green cloth boards. Marbled eps. Edges stained red. VG sq & tight/sp sltly sunned/some lt spotting to front board/stamp of 'Haskings for Health Medford Ore' on blank front fly/number stamp on title page. Fully illustrated with cuts charts & graphs. 8vo. <br/><br/> International Textbook Company hardcover books
192924850Washington D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office 1929. First edition. Paper wrappers. A very good copy wrappers lightly browned small repair to crease of map. Paged 1557-1599. Illus. with 2 maps one large color folding. 8vo. U. S. Government Printing Office unknown books
199016543Washington DC: American Chemical Society 1990. First edition. Hardcover. Fine. 8vo. 138 pp. Edited by Jeffrey I Seeman. Illustrated with some black and white photographs. Memoir of the well known chemist whose Stereochemistry of Carbon Compounds remains a standard to today's budding organic chemistry students. Fine condition. Issued without dustwrapper. This copy has been nicely INSCRIBED by Eliel and quite scarce thus. <br/><br/> American Chemical Society hardcover books
196322990Springfield IL: Charles C. Thomas. Very Good- in Very Good dj. c.1963. First Edition. Hardcover. a little shelfwear rear hinge cracked light spotting/foxing to top edge of text block; jacket shows a little wear along top edge minor tears and slight dog-earing at top of spine spine itself a little sun-browned. tables figures INSCRIBED and SIGNED by the author on the ffep: "To _____ and ____ / With love / Hy." I have nothing to say about heparin whatsoever but for the sake of filling up a little space will quote Wikipedia's description of it as a "medication which is used as a blood thinner that is specifically used to treat and prevent deep vein thrombosis pulmonary embolism and arterial thromboembolism and also used in the treatment of heart attacks and unstable angina." Was this particular tome a significant contribution to the literature of heparin I've got no idea but never mind all of that anyway: as far as I'm concerned the interest in this volume lies in the fact that it was authored and autographed! by the doctor who will go down in history as Marilyn Monroe's personal physician. Not only was he the guy who prescribed some of the medications that likely contributed to her death but who also was the one who actually discovered her body and first notified the police. It's also been claimed that he lied about various matters connected with the situation both at the time and in later testimony and interviews but let's not debate that here. You gotta give the doc this much credit though: if a similar situation happened today someone in his position probably would have scored a pretty sweet book deal -- and not for some dry text issued by a medical-book publisher in Springfield Illinois either. Signed by Author . Charles C. Thomas hardcover books
200330869Hoboken: Wiley - Interscience 2003. First edition. Hardcover. Fine. Hardbound quarto. Issued without dustwrapper. 397 pp. First printing with complete number row. Per the rear cover this book is "An innovative text with a focus on metabolism and enzyme-catalyzed reactions" A fine copy in blue boards printed in yellow. Wiley - Interscience hardcover books
16715Agnes Morgan and Irene Hall. Experimental Food Study. Designed "for use in the beginning course of foods in the Department of Household Science at the University of California". Presumed First Edition. Quite a bit of chemistry. Appendix; 2 indices. . 8vo. Agnes Fay Morgan May 4 1884 - July 20 1968 was an American chemist and academic. She completed a Ph.D. in chemistry at the University of Chicago in 1914. She may have been the only married woman to have received a Ph.D. in chemistry in the first few years of the 20th century .She became a the longtime chair of the home economics program at the University of California Berkley. Her program was strongly grounded in science and students admitted into the program were required to have a level of science education that was not typical of home economics programs at the time. Some of the most significant scientific research to emerge from Morgan's laboratory concerned the biochemistry of vitamins and the nutritional value of foods. Morgan analyzed processed foods and characterized their vitamin composition. Gilt lettering on spine of brown boards; some bumping rubbing rolled spine scuffing but overall very good Condition. unknown books
195441359London: Derek Verschoyle Academic and Bibliographical Publications Ltd 1954. Reprint of 1906 Edition. xxiv487; 598 pp. 2 vols. 8vo. Gray Cloth. Fine. Volume One in fine dust wrapper. Reprint of 1906 Edition. xxiv487; 598 pp. 2 vols. 8vo. Derek Verschoyle Academic and Bibliographical Publications Ltd unknown books
1842264115Braunschweig: Vieweg und Sohn 1842. Fourth edition. xi 351 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Quarter calf and brown marbled boards black spine label. Rubbed. Collector's stamp on flyleaf and first sectional title some toning. Very good. Fourth edition. xi 351 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Early edition of the pioneering work in organic chemistry and nutrition by Justus Liebig 1803-1873 the greatest chemist of his time. PMM 310a for first edition 1840 Vieweg und Sohn unknown books
1954223249London: Holland Press 1954. Second edition. 2 vols. 8vo. Red buckram. Fine. Second edition. 2 vols. 8vo. Holland Press unknown books
181061372Edinburgh: Printed for W. Blackwood 1810. First edition. xii 1-496 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Three-quarter calf marbled boards leather spine label. Extremities rubbed joints tender light foxing. Title page bears contemporary signature of John Steele. First edition. xii 1-496 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Possibly owned by John Steele mechanical innovator who in 1817 started the first power loom in New Hampshire. Steele a Democrat in politics was elected Governor of New Hampshire in 1844 and 1845. Printed for W. Blackwood unknown books
1733254213Franckfurt am Mayn: Johann Friedrich Fleischer 1733. 109 pp. Modern brown cloth last 4 leaves with some staining else Very Good. 109 pp. "In any case the author was a person of great wisdom and Fictuld recommends it in the highest degree" Ferguson. Ferguson II43 Johann Friedrich Fleischer unknown books
11221Glenn Seaborg Nobel Prize scientist who discovered plutonium. Section head in the Manhattan Project. In Los Alamos Seaborg discovered isotope plutonium-239 and showed that it was fissionable with slow neutrons and hence plutonium-239 became the explosive material in the atomic bomb. This led to the plutonium part of the Manhattan Project. However in June 1945 he signed the Franck Report opposing the use of the bomb against a large city before the demonstration of its destructive power to the enemy. But President Truman ignored its suggestions and ordered the Bombing of Hiroshima. Seaborg later also discovered radioisotopes used to treat millions of cancer patients. Scientific Autograph Manuscript Unsigned3 pages in pencil on lined paper. Unsigned but entirely in his hand and with Seaborg's personal stamp at the top and the original envelope. <br/>The manuscript is a review of a piece of scientific scholarly writing monograph. Seaborg writes: ".a part of a series on Analytical Chemistry of the Elements prepared by the Vernadski Institute of Geochemistry and Analytical Chemistry.it deals with the transplutonium elements with atomic numbers 95 to 104 inclusive and covers the literature through 1969.The title is misleading in that the monograph covers much more than analytical chemistry to the pleasant surprise of the reviewer. The first chapter includes a brief account of the discovery of these elements . Included is a discussion of the radioactive proportions .of the most important about 25 isotopes of the methods of production. Included also is a discussion of the solid compounds and their methods of formation. Chapter III is devoted to the methods of analytical determination-radiometric chemical separation by ion exchange and solvent extractions. reactions with organic reagents. This monograph.would be a worthwhile addition to the library of.inorganic chemists." . In excellent condition. unknown books
1806231455New York: Brisban & Brannan 1806. First edition with half-title. Illustrated with 2 full page engavings of chemical apparatus. 469 3 ads pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Contemporary calf red leather spine label. Extremities slightly rubbed else Fine. Contemporary bookplate of Robert Cook "The wicked borroweth and returneth not again. First edition with half-title. Illustrated with 2 full page engavings of chemical apparatus. 469 3 ads pp. 1 vols. 8vo. The book is dedicated to Thomas Jefferson who was a fellow student of Ewell's brother at William and Mary College. Ewell studied with Bejamin Rush and produced this first American chemistry text for the nonscientist. Brisban & Brannan unknown books
15197Education Archive of 4 historical pieces documenting education from the mid-1800s to the turn of the century. Includes 2 course catalogs 1 alumni reunion anniversary program and 1 handwritten Chemistry lab notebook from the academic year 1904-1905 that is entirely filled with 220 handwritten pages of notes observations and drawings by student Frank Hanke. Hanke a student at "R.T. Crane High School" in Chicago IL carefully documented 65 experiments from his science class noting chemical equations and including three fold-out charts comparing "Metal alkalies" "Metals of the Calcium Group" and the "Iron Group." "I carefully slid over the opening of the receiver the glass slip just far enough to insert a burning splinter of wood. I thrust the plinter into the receiver and the flame immediately went out and the gas did not burn." Includes 16 hand-drawn scientific illustrations documenting procedures observations and results. 4 large full-page drawings of Bunsen Burner Luminous and Non-Luminous Flames and Davy's Safety Lamp. Comes with 13 loose sheets of additional notes in Hanke's hand. Original boards feature photo-illustrated image of school on front cover and student's name handwritten in red and black ink. <br/><br/>Comes with catalogues for Phillips Academy in Andover MA 1854 and the Theological Seminary in Bangor ME 1895; these catalogues list the current students and faculty and give brief overview of the institutions' histories and fields of study including course descriptions student events and first-hand student descriptions of life at school. Also includes a booklet 1884 celebrating the Thirty-Fifth Anniversary of the 1849 graduating class of Bowdoin College in Brunswick ME; this gives an overview of the students' lives since graduating including classmates who went on to serve as soldiers on opposing sides of the Civil War. Small tears and light stains and foxing to catalogue covers. Light toning and occasional foxing. All in very good to good condition. Collection provides a unique glimpse into the start of modern American education. R.T Crane High School Chemistry Notebook with handwritten student notes and drawings 1904-1905. Catalogue of the Trustees Instructors and Students of Philips Academy 1854. General Catalogue of the Theological Seminary Bangor Maine 1895. Bowdoin College The Thirty-Fifth Anniversary of the Class of 1849 1884. unknown books
18333474London: Longman Rees Orme Brown Greene & Longman 1833. First edition. Near Fine. Publisher's cloth binding retaining the delicate paper label to front board. Some bumping to corners and faint spotting to boards but a pleasing square copy in all. Internally a clean with just a bit of scattered foxing to endpapers and preliminaries. Scarce on the market this book documents Marcet's efforts to expand knowledge access to the working classes in order to make political self-advocacy possible. Presented by Marcet to Professor Pierre Prevost the philosopher and physicist best known for his experiment on the body's radiation of heat this copy bears his ownership signature on the front endpaper and an inscription from Marcet at the header of the title: "Prof. Prevost from the Author." <br/><br/>A peer of such feminist thinkers as Maria Edgeworth Marcet is considered one of the most important figures in the history of women's education in science and economics. Her "Conversations" books which include texts on politics economics and science were ranked among the best-known educational texts of the nineteenth century. In addition to making these rigorous fields accessible to women who might otherwise be denied such training they also welcomed in young boys whose access to quality education might be hindered by class. Among her most famous readers was Michael Faraday who encountered her books while serving as a bookbinder's apprentice and was inspired to delve more deeply into the sciences Science History Institute. The present work seeks to popularize economic theory and put forward an argument for decreasing wage gaps among rich and poor; and in line with her overall project Marcet seeks to make her argument accessible to readers of all education levels. Wrapped in allegory in order to welcome in labor-class readers who may not have complex economic vocabularies Marcet's tale posits the need for new economic policy into a series of nine allegorical essays told "through the eyes of honest John Hopkins a laborer on low wages" Liberty. Scholars have increasingly viewed John Hopkins as an important and previously undervalued piece of Marcet's oeuvre; and her desire to bring the working class into dialogue about their own economic state signals an important cultural change. "Marcet was engaged in the work of the knowledge broker -- creating and maintaining networks between and among scientists and the larger public. Knowledge sharing was based upon the personal and social connections she facilitated by bringing together bankers scientists and professional economists such as Malthus Ricardo Mill and others. It was extended to the popular culture through the many editions of her Conversations addressed to the middle classes and enlarged to include the working classes with her John Hopkins's Notions on Political Economy" L. Forget. Lesser known but nonetheless one of Marcet's culturally important contributions this volume contains important lessons on how to expand a class's knowledge base and provide the tools for political and economic self-advocacy. Notably this copy reveals the influential scientific communities she participated in connecting her to men in the hard sciences who knew of and read her work.<br/><br/>Feminist Companion 713. Women in Science 125. Dictionary of Economics. Near Fine. Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Greene & Longman unknown books
16993700London:: printed for Dan. Brown at the Black Swan without Temple-Bar; Tho. Bennet at the Half-Moon D. Midwinter and Tho. Leigh at the Rose and Crown and R. Wilkin at the King’s-Head in St. Paul’s Church-yard 1699. FIRST ENGLISH EDITION of Jean Haudicquer de Blancourt's "De l’art de la verrerie". Octavo:. 18.3 x 11.5 cm. 16 355 13 p. Collation: A-Z8 Aa8. With 9 engraved plates. Bound in contemporary English paneled calf rebacked. Very fine condition. Two plates lightly browned marginal foxing to a few leaves. Illustrated with 9 engraved plates of glass-making furnaces tools crucibles and other apparatus. The core of Blancourt's text is Christopher Merret's annotated Latin edition 1668 of Antonio Neri's "L'Arte Vetraria"1612. Merret had produced his own English unillustrated translation of Neri's work in 1662. Among Blancourt's notable contributions to the text are a chapter on crystal glass and metal mirrors; and an appendix on a secret technique for making glass eyes look "Very Natural". "Antonio Neri’s 'L'Arte Vetraria' as the first printed book solely devoted to the art of glass formulation. It is a work committed to the subject of refining raw materials and combining them into a range of glasses and a rainbow of colors. The book divides into seven parts each devoted to a different aspect of the glassmaker’s art. He starts with the basics: preparing the fundamental ingredients of glass. Next he combines those materials into “cristallo.†Named after its mineral cousin rock crystal cristallo was a sophisticated Venetian specialty renowned for its delicate clarity. Neri details its traditional composition as brought to the Medici court by Venetian masters and then innovates with variations of his own. "At the other end of the spectrum is his “common†glass used for daily utilitarian purposes. He shows the standard formulas used in shops throughout the region and then proceeds to improve upon them. He presents a gamut of colors as well as advice for the glass “to emerge in full beauty and perfection." He shows the way to decolorize glass to take away even a slight tinge of hue that may be present and bring the melt to perfect crystal clarity. He walks us through numerous recipes in preparation for making an iconic Renaissance glass including the exquisite chalcedony—engineered to replicate the swirling colors of its namesake mineral. Beautiful to behold and thought by many to engender mystical properties Neri describes it as “adorned with so many graceful and beautiful areas of undulations and enhanced with the play of diverse lively flaming colors.†He goes on to describe leaded glasses artificial gems enamels and glass paints. Each time he innovates each time he guides us with encouragement admonition and painstaking clarity. "That Neri’s book was the first of its kind in print is a notable distinction but one that his deeper accomplishment easily surpasses; 'L'Arte Vetraria' preserves a rare glimpse of skilled practical knowledge. In his era prized techniques were frequently lost to subsequent generations lost because artisans so often spared the pen. Their precious knowledge went purposely unrecorded passing in strict confidence from master to apprentice working side by side. In 1612 Neri published his expertise to the world preserving the techniques and science of glass practices but also its art. Just as a great painter relies on the quality of pigments at hand so must a master glass artisan depend upon the materials of the melt. For the glassblowers and furnace workers who shaped hot glass a superior batch was crucial to superior results. A great piece of glasswork owes its form to the talent of the artist but its substance is the province of the craftsmen who make the glass. "Neri wrote 'L’Arte Vetraria' shortly before his death at the age of thirty-eight. Soon after Galileo sent it to a friend in Rome who was anxious for a copy."Paul Engle "Antonio Neri Alchemist Glassmaker Priest" Corning Museum of Glass ESTC R16918; Wing CD-ROM 1996 H1150. See Dwight P. Lanmon and David Whitehouse "Glass in the Robert Lehman Collection" p. 102 printed for Dan. Brown at the Black Swan without Temple-Bar; Tho. Bennet at the Half-Moon, D. Midwinter and Tho. Leigh at the Ro unknown books