3 417 résultats
180 p. + Frontis. Dampstain. Foxed. Browned. Lacks fly leaves. 24mo. 140 mm. Disbound. Poor. Title continues: 'With Questions For Exercise, And A Glossary Of Terms In Common Use. Intended as an Elementary Book for Schools and a Companion for private Students, particularly those who wish to attend popular Lectures. SCARCE. S&S/AI 21077. PAIMP 10
No marks or inscriptions. No creasing to covers. A very clean copy with bright unmarked boards and no bumping to corners. Spiral ring binder in excellent condition. 230pp. Description of methods, physical properties and formulae of around 200 pesticides, their GC retention characteristics.a bibliography of almost 500 references and an author index.
Cover slightly grubby, pages slightly ages toned, but internally, bright and tight. Owners signature to FEP. Used
Melbourne, London, Toronto, Heinemann, (1957). Orig. full cloth. XVI,467 pp., frontispiece and 22 plates, textillustrations. Clean and fine.
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. Volume 2, pages 305 - 536. Black and white illustrations.
Broché. 245 pages.
London, W. Simpkin & R. Marshall, 1824. Small 8vo. Later solid fabrikoid cloth. Partly uncut. VIII,172 pp. and 2 folded woodengraved plates with 39 figs. (the first plate numb.:plate 1, the second unnumb.). A few leaves slightly brownspotted, a few annotations in old hand.
Hardcover (no jacket). Ex-academic library copy with stamps on the endpapers and two or three pages. Minor exterior edgewear with a cocked spine and a bump to the rear board leading edge. Light marks on the page block and some pages. Nicked upper edge of page 141. Pen on BEP and copyright page. Binding visible on the title page, otherwise sound. All content is clear. CM Used
London, Macmillan and Co., 1874. Orig. full cloth. Spine ends frayed, a little wear and fading. XII,512 pp. and a few textillustrations.
First edition, [6], 198pp., with half-title, faint stamp to title-page, recent half-calf, marbled boards, spine decorated in blind with red morocco title label lettered in gilt. "As indicated by the title, the first section deals with the preparation of fixed air and the methods used to impregnate water with it. The properties of fixed air are found in references scattered throughout the text. The works of Black, Priestly, Cavendish, Brownrigg and others are cited."?Cole. Cole, Chemical Literature 1700-1860, 374; Partington, History of Chemistry, Vol. III, p. 689; Duveen, pp. 175-76.
Hardcover without dust jacket. Orange cloth boards are sunned at spine and lightly rubbed at corners. Foxing to endpapers, prelims and page block. Lightly pencilled annotations to REP. All other pages clean and unmarked. AD Used
xiv + 165pp., 21cm., signed with dedication by the author, cloth (cover bit stained), few foxing, text in good condition, W76581
cm. 17 x 24, 104 pp. con 9 figg. n.t. e 1 tav. f.t. Biblioteca di ?Nuncius? Inglese 221 gr. 104 p.
First edition, 8vo (200 x 120 mm), [2], 71, [1]pp., endpapers renewed, calf-backed marbled boards, gilt title label on upper cover.
First Edition, title slightly dusty,15, [1] pp., disbound. In 1841 the author patented his method of water softening ('Clark's process'). This removed what was called temporary hardness (hardness removable by boiling), which is due to the presence of calcium hydrogen carbonate (calcium bicarbonate). On boiling, this is converted to calcium carbonate which is deposited as scale or fur. Clark's method was to effect this precipitation by adding a calculated quantity of slaked lime, after first determining the degree of hardness. He published several works on this process, including A New Process for Purifying the Waters Supplied to the Metropolis (1841), and 'On the examination of water for towns, for its hardness, and for the incrustation it deposits on boiling' (Chemical Gazette). However, though the process was highly praised by Graham and others, it was several years before water companies made much use of it. Goldsmith, 32133.
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. 282 pages. Previous owner's name.
Staple-bound paperback in good condition, 14pp. No publish date printed, but presume ca. 1958-1960. Covers are tanned along edges, faintly marked and creased at lower leading corner. Mark to margins of two pages, otherwise clean throughout. AD Used
No marks or inscriptions. No creasing to covers or to spine. A very clean very tight copy with bright unmarked boards, small rub to lower front edge and tiny bump to lower front corner. 325pp. This book works its way through toxicology, industrial hygiene, occupational exposure limits, chemical hazard data sheets, classification of chemicals, notification laws, food contact legislation and environmental toxicology. The company Exxon supplies chemicals to industry and the book gives data on their products.
Slightly marked cover with edgewear Used
17x13. 505p. 381p. 2 Vols. Fotogr. Ilstr.
London, T. Egerton, 1818. Contemp. marbled boards. Titlelabel with gilt lettering on upper board. A paperlabel pasted on lower part of spine. Stamps on title-page. A few faint scattered brownspots.
pp.357-422, 24cm., with dedicace by H.C.Jones, Reprinted from the American Chemical Journal (1905)
(London, W. Bulmer and Co., 1814). 4to. 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" 1814 - Part I. Pp. 1-22 and 1 engraved plate. Last textleaf slightly browned, otherwise clean and fine.
Fourth edition, 5 vols., 8vo (210 x 130 mm), xv, [1], 669; viii, 687, [1]; viii, 686; viii, 710; viii, 848pp., with half-titles, 4 engraved plates, finely bound in contemporary calf, wide stained border to covers, tooled in blind with a palmette style tool and Greek-key, gilt ornaments to corners, spine with four double-raised bands, the bands and a panel at head and foot stained black and gilding over, to enhance the decorative effect, second and fourth compartment lettered in gilt direct, others tooled in gilt and blind, diagonal gilt hatching at corners of edges of boards, gold one-line on turn-ins, a very attractive set, not signed but possible a Northern provincial binder. A fine set attractively bound. "Thomson's System was the first extensive treatise on chemistry written in Great Britain... the objectives of the work was to promote the advancement of chemistry by collecting the numerous facts from their scattered sources, to incorporate the history of the development of chemistry and to give exact references to the original works in which the discoveries were reported. To make this edition up to date important additions and alterations were introduced into almost every chapter, also some new sections were added increasing the text to five volumes."?Cole. Cole, Chemical Literature, 1281.
Quarto in dark orange-maroon cloth; xvi, 833 pages illustrations 24 cm Chemistry, Analytic -- Quantitative. Chemistry, Analytic -- Quantitative.