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1644703483.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1943663076.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1644704927.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1644704404.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1644703947.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1644704897.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1644704072.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
YENN01371NEW. NEW. Enviamos a todo el mundo por USPS. UPS o DHL. 100% garantia en su compra. We ship worldwide. unknown
2012__9086862039Wageningen Academic Publishers 2012. Hardcover. New. 549 pages. 9.50x6.75x1.00 inches. Wageningen Academic Publishers hardcover
8vo., First Edition, with 27 plates on 16; black cloth, gilt back, a near fine copy in unclipped dustwrapper. Covers both London Fire Brigade and Auxiliary Fire Service. Enser, p.88.
504 p. Illustrations. 8vo. Original full worn decorated cloth binding. Scarce work on the great flood. DISASTER / FIRE/ FLOOD PA 42.
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. Red cover with pasted-down color illustration. Decorative endpapers. 9 1/2"w x 11 3/4"h. 100 pages. Brightly colored illustrations. Previous owner's inscription inside from 1946. Contains "modern" stories on all kinds of transportation/machines.
Brandon, Ivan & Nic KleinIn Pristine Condition. unknown
19872092902141201483beijing yanshan 1987. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. beijing yanshan paperback
Features: The Grand National Steeplechase; Glasgow Fire; Volcanic Eruption of New Guinea; Khrushchev visits De Gaulle; Master Works of Ancient Iranian Artists; Makerere College, The University College of East Africa; The Rover 80 and 100 - automobile feature; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Sound copy. Magazine
Features: The first transatlantic jet airliner service; Princess Margaret's informal visit to Belgium; Regimental Fire; H.M.S. Leopard Commissioned at Portsmouth; Rugby School; Labour Party Conference at Scarborough; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Sound copy. Book
Features/Photos: Iranian earthquake kills 20,000; Farnborough 1962; Politburo versus Willaya IV - Algeria; Royal Tomb at Igbo, Nigeria; Mariner II - tearing the viel from Venus; Colour photos of nuclear explosion 200 miles over Johnson Island; Southern California Brush Land Fire; and more. Centerfold loose from one staple. Moderate wear. Clean and unmarked. Quality copy. Magazine
18668633A Genève, Chez Jules-Guillaume Fick, 1866. In-12 broché de 129-[5] pages, couverture décorée. Belle condition, non coupé, non rogné.
MC00C-00619Utica Fire Alarm Telegraph Company. Collectible - Acceptable. Utica NY: Utica Fire Alarm Telegraph Company n.d. ca. 1900. Oblong 16mo paperback. 70pp. Illustrations. Poor book. Reading copy only. Lacking covers and backstrip. Pages soiled and discolored. Telephones Trade Catalogs Inquire if you need further information. Utica Fire Alarm Telegraph Company paperback
185611059London: Chief Offices Unity Buildings 1856. 8vo. 36 pp. <br><br>Column-by-column rebuttal of a "Daily News" article.<br>Â Â Â Â WorldCat finds no copies in the U.S. and precious few in Britain or Europe. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â Not in NSTC CD version; not in Goldsmiths'; not in Kress. Removed from a nonce volume leaves separated. Title-page with small inked numeral in upper corner also with light soiling and one small stamp. Chief Offices, Unity Buildings unknown books
1998TB30861Hartford Conn.: United States Fire-Arms Manufacturing Company Inc. c 1998 revised Jan. 1998. Fifth Anniversary Edition. Revised Jan. 1998 Fine in heavy black paper wraps over a double stapled binding with metallic red text on the front cover. An oblong octavo of 8 1/2 by 11 inches. Without a dust jacket as issued. 64 pages of text and illustrated throughout from black and white and color photographs. United States Fire-Arms Manufacturing Company, Inc. paperback books
196577049Oak Ridge TN: United States Atomic Energy Commission Division of Technical Information 1965. Presumed First Edition First printing thus. Wraps. Good. Title from cover. v 1 46 pages. 2 Tables. Notice of Change Number 3682 May 9 196 laid in. Cover has some wear and soiling. Ex-library with the usual library markings. Date stamped on front. Short narrative descriptions of incidents involving radioactive materials together with a table of radiation exposures for AEC Contractor personnel are included because of their special interest to the atomic energy industry. Also includes are descriptions of industrial fatal accidents. A serious accident was defined as an accident required to be reported immediately to Commission Headquarters and included any of the following: a fatalities; b government property damage of $5000 or more; c an external radiation exposure greater than 15 rems received over a short period of time; and d other injury or industrial illness no matter how slight of five or more persons in one accident and other defined accidents. AEC Manual Chapters 0502-04 and 0523-052 then in effect fully defined immediately reportable accidents. The contents include: Serious Accidents 1961-1962; Radiation Exposure of AEC Contractor Personnel Accidents and Incidents Involving Radioactive Materials in AEC Activities 1961-1962 and Accidents involving Fatalities in AEC Activities 1961-1962. This Summary does not contain accident experience in private or licensed operations. In April 1962 revised reporting requirements were established in AEC Manual Chapter 0502. The information in this supplement pertaining to the 1962 experience includes those accidents and incidents designated at "Type A" and "Type B" along with a few others of a lesser degree of importance which may be of interest. Type A criteria reflects a far more serious event with greater property damage and higher radiation exposure limits. United States Atomic Energy Commission, Division of Technical Information paperback
195977046Oak Ridge TN: United States Atomic Energy Commission Technical Information Service 1959. Reproduced from the best available copy --believed contemporaneous with initial publication. Wraps. Good. iv 30 pages. Footnotes. 8 Charts. Cover has some wear and soiling. Ex-library with the usual library markings. This report includes narrative descriptions of accidents involving radiation reported to the Atomic Energy Commission by its contractors in 1957 and 1958. Data are also presented on occupational injuries and fatalities in all activities of the Atomic Energy Commission since the beginning of the AEC as a civilian agency Jan 1 1947 through Dec. 30 1958. Narrative descriptions are included on all fatal accidents during 1957 and 1958. The contents are: Industrial Injury Rates AEC Fatal Accident Experience A Summary of Accidents Involving Fatalities in Atomic Energy Activities 1957-58 Lost Time Injuries from Radiation and A summary of Accidents Involving Radioactive Materials in Atomic Energy Activities 1957-58. Where comparisons are made the latest data on injuries published by the National Safety Council were used. The Commission's injury rates taken as a whole including accidents involving nuclear radiation compare very favorably with the best rates in the National Safety Council's annual report. The over-all AEC injury frequency rate for several years has been second or third from the top. In most cases of strains and sprains workers were lifting improperly or failed to obtain proper assistance. Over 90 per cent of the fracture resulted either from workers falling from a different level or from falling objects striking the workers. The fatality rate was attributed to increased construction activity. It was noted that at all times the rate deaths per 100000 employees had been below the average industrial occupational fatality rate reported by the National Safety Council. United States Atomic Energy Commission, Technical Information Service paperback
196177047Oak Ridge TN: United States Atomic Energy Commission Technical Information Service 1961. Reproduced from the best available copy --believed contemporaneous with initial publication. Wraps. Good. iv 35 1 pages. Footnotes. 7 Charts. Cover has some wear and soiling. Ex-library with the usual library markings. Date stamped on front cover. Short narrative descriptions of incidents involving radioactive materials have been separated from the total accident experience because of their special interest to the atomic energy industry. In some instances the 1959-60 accidents have been added to the tables previously published in which were compiled data beginning in 1945. A new table of inadvertent criticality situations is included in this supplement through the courtesy of Mr. William Stratton of the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory. Also included in this supplement is a tabulation of exposure records at values from zero to 15 rems which reflects a measure of the control of radiation in the work places in Commission operations. The contents include: Serious Accidents 1959-1960; AEC Industrial Injury Frequency Rates Criticality Accidents Radiation Exposure A Summary of Accidents Involving Radioactive Materials in AEC Activities 1959-1960 and A Summary of Accidents involving Fatalities in AEC Activities 1959-1960. A serious accident was defined as an accident required to be reported immediately to Commission Headquarters and included any of the following: a fatalities; b government property damage of $5000 or more; c an external radiation exposure greater than 15 rems received over a short period of time; and d other injury or industrial illness no matter how slight of five or more persons in one accident and other defined accidents. AEC Manual Chapters 0502-04 and 0523-052 gave full definitions of immediately reportable accidents. United States Atomic Energy Commission, Technical Information Service paperback
196377048Oak Ridge TN: United States Atomic Energy Commission Technical Information Service 1963. Presumed First Edition First printing thus. Wraps. Good. v 1 34 pages. 2 Tables. Cover has some wear and soiling. Ex-library with the usual library markings. Ink notation on front cover. Short narrative descriptions of incidents involving radioactive materials together with a table of radiation exposures for AEC Contractor personnel are included because of their special interest to the atomic energy industry. Also includes are descriptions of industrial fatal accidents. A serious accident was defined as an accident required to be reported immediately to Commission Headquarters and included any of the following: a fatalities; b government property damage of $5000 or more; c an external radiation exposure greater than 15 rems received over a short period of time; and d other injury or industrial illness no matter how slight of five or more persons in one accident and other defined accidents. AEC Manual Chapters 0502-04 and 0523-052 then in effect fully defined immediately reportable accidents. The contents include: Serious Accidents 1961-1962; Radiation Exposure of AEC Contractor Personnel Accidents and Incidents Involving Radioactive Materials in AEC Activities 1961-1962 and Accidents involving Fatalities in AEC Activities 1961-1962. In April 1962 revised reporting requirements were established in AEC Manual Chapter 0502. The information in this supplement pertaining to the 1962 experience includes those accidents and incidents designated at "Type A" and "Type B" along with a few others of a lesser degree of importance which may be of interest. Type A criteria reflects a far more serious event with greater property damage and higher radiation exposure limits. United States Atomic Energy Commission, Technical Information Service paperback