Non Renseigné. Non daté. In-8. Cartonnage d'éditeurs. Etat d'usage, Tâchée, Dos satisfaisant, Quelques rousseurs. 992 pp., figures noir et blanc dans le texte, coins frottés - 1 PHOTO DISPONIBLE.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Paris Octave Doin 1883 In-12 Broché Satisfaisant
Couverture gris-bleu imprimée, défraichie ; titre en long sur le dos ; papier froissé et légèrement déchiré (sans gravité) ; XX (introduction, bibliographie)+119pp ; Ouvrage à l'usage des étudiants, traduit d'après le texte allemand par J.-Paul Lachmann ; édition française, considérablement augmentée (en collaboration avec l'auteur) ; le corps d'ouvrage est assez frais, malgré quelques les tranches un peu poussiéreuses paru dans la collection "Bibliothèque biologique internationale", N°XI
Paris, Anselin & Pochard, 1827-28. 2 contemp. marbled boards. Gilt titlelabels on upper boards. Stamps on title-pages. 44,(2)(4),46,(2) pp.
DUNOD. 1931. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 127 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 631.4-Science des sols : chimie, physique, fertilité
Deuxième édition, revue et augmentée. Classification Dewey : 631.4-Science des sols : chimie, physique, fertilité
P., Rousset, 1914, in 8° broché, 70 pages.
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Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
Ch. Béranger 1928 In-12 relié 27,5 cm. Bon état d’occasion.
3° édition, revue corrigée et augmentée. Renseignements techniques, numérotage et titrage des fils, filature du coton, de la laine, du lin etc., tissage, armures, métiers à tisser, prix de revient, établissement d’un tissage, renseignements commerciaux. Bon état d’occasion
Wien, Carl Gerold, 1813-15. Bound in 2 contemp. blue boards. Titlelabels with gilt lettering on spines. XV,518,(2)XXX,574,(2) pp. Light toning to first title-page. Some scattered brownspots.
First edition.
CENTRE D'ETUDES NUCLEAIRES DE SACLAY - SERVIE DE DOCUMENTATION. 1961. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 28 pages agraffées.. . . . Classification Dewey : 631.4-Science des sols : chimie, physique, fertilité
Classification Dewey : 631.4-Science des sols : chimie, physique, fertilité
CENTRE D'ETUDES NUCLEAIRES DE SACLAY - SERVIE DE DOCUMENTATION. 1962. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 20 pages agraffées.. . . . Classification Dewey : 631.4-Science des sols : chimie, physique, fertilité
Classification Dewey : 631.4-Science des sols : chimie, physique, fertilité
MedMaster Inc., Miami Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 2002 Book condition, Etat : Très Bon paperback, editor's illustrated white wrappers, with a colour humoristic figure grand In-8 1 vol. - 161 pages
few text figures in black and white Contents, Chapitres : Contents, Acknowledgments, v, Text, 156 pages - Preface - The basic - IV solutions and IV orders - Hyponatremia - Hypernatremia - Hypokalemia - Hyperkalemia - Metabolic acidosis - Metabolic alkalosis - Mixed acid-base disorders - Case examples fine copy, no markings
Couverture souple. Broché. 126 pages. Papier bruni.
Livre. Editions P.U.F (Collection : Que sais-je? N° 240), 1950.
Hermann et Cie , Actualités Scientifiques et Industrielles Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1933 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché grand In-8 1 vol. - 61 pages
dos legerement défraichi avec de petites dechirures sans manques, une étiquette sur le haut du dos, sinon bon état, intérieur propre, papier à peine jauni, cela reste un exemplaire correct de lecture
Presses Universitaires de France Edition originale Première édition 4ème trimestre 1946. 1946. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 128 pages illustrées de quelques dessins en noir et blanc. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
La première encyclopédie de poche fondée en 1941 par Paul Angoulvent, traduite en 43 langues, diffusée, pour les éditions françaises, à plus de 160 millions d'exemplaires, la collection Que sais-je? est l'une des plus importantes bases de données internationnales, construite pour le grand public par des spécialistes. 3800 titres ont été publiés depuis l'origine par 2500 auteurs. Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Hermann et Cie , Actualités Scientifiques et Industrielles Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1936 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée éditeur grand In-8 1 vol. - 79 pages
10 figures dans le texte 1ere édition Contents, Chapitres : Oxydation de l'hydrogène par le protoxyde d'azote, combustion du deutérium et de l'oxyde de carbone - Combustion du phosphore, des dérivés du soufre et des dérivés sulfatés - Combustion des hydrocarbures - Index bibliographique "tampon ""Pour compte rendu "" sur le coin du plat supérieur, papier à peine jauni, sinon bon état"
Hermann et Cie , Actualités Scientifiques et Industrielles Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1939 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché grand In-8 1 vol. - 65 pages
Hermann et Cie , Actualités Scientifiques et Industrielles Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1936 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché grand In-8 1 vol. - 88 pages
Hermann et Cie , Actualités Scientifiques et Industrielles Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1936 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché grand In-8 1 vol. - 78 pages
Pris, Londres, New York, Gordon et Breach, 1969, in 8°, reliure cartonnée rouge de l'éditeur, XV-191 pages ; traces de ruban adhésif sur les gardes.
PHOTOS sur DEMANDE. ...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
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SEDES. 1952. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Coins frottés, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. paginé de 972 à 1258 - nombreuses illustrations noir et blanc dans le texte - tampon en première page de texte. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
à l'usage des candidats au Certificats de Chimie Générale et à l'Agrégation des Sciences Physiques Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
P., Nyon, 1777, 3 VOLUMES in 12 reliés en plein veau moucheté, dos ornés defers dorés, tranches rouges (reliures de l'époque), (petit accroc sans gravité à une coiffe), T.1 : 36pp., 434pp., (1), 2 planches dépliantes, T.2 : (2), 62pp., 297pp., 1 planche dépliante, T.3 : (2), 6pp., 352pp., 5 planches dépliantes
---- PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE --- BEL EXEMPLAIRE ---- "C'est en 1772 que Priestley publia ses premières observations sur différentes espèces d'air. Recueillant les gaz sur la cuve à mercure (1773) il put isoler un grand nombre d'entre eux... Il découvrit aussi l'hydrogène sulfuré, l'oxyde azotique, l'éthylène... Il étudia le gaz carbonique, découvrit la respiration des végétaux. Sa principale découverte fut celle de l'oxygène..." ---- "Rare. According to Hoefer "cette traduction fut faite en quelque sorte sous les yeux de l'auteur". It also contains a reprint of a letter to the translator from Priestley in which he says : "Je viens de m'assurer que l'air fixe est une modification de l'acide nitreux. The nature of nitrogen as an element was not recognised until Lavoisier... Dr. Priestley's most important scientific publication, containing accounts of his discoveries of nitric oxide, nitrous oxide (laughing gas, the anaesthetic properties of which were only recognised 28 years later by Sir Humphry Davy), sulphurous acid, carbon dioxide, hydrochloric acid, silicon tetrafluoride, and ammonia gas, while he was the first to collect gases over mercury in his pneumatic trough. It contains moreover his important investigations on the absorption of gases by liquids, and describes his preparation of pure nitrogen ('phlogisticated air') ; but it is most important for his discovery of oxigen ('dephlogisticated air'), a discovery also made, independently of Priestley, by Scheele, and also claimed by Lavoisier...". (Sotheran supp. 2 Tome 1 N° 11805 & 11793) ---- "Jacques Gibelin's approved translation of the three volumes of priestley's Experiments and observations on different kinds of Air. The translator has added letters from Priestley in vols I and III and a translation of priestley's paper read at the Royal Society Jan. 25, 1776, Observations on respiration in vol. II. The essay presented to the Academie of Sciences by the Duc De Chaulnes on 15 May 1776, Description d'un appareil nouveau (for preparation and collection of gases) is reprinted in vol. III with three plates. The editor has added a few notes, divided a few paragraphs differently and corrected the errata. The list of subscribers in vol. II is interesting, Lavoisier asked for 8 sets". (Cole N° 1067) ---- DSB XI pp. 139/147 - Partington III pp. 236/301**4321/ARM1A
P., Nyon, 1777/1783, 8 VOLUMES in 12 reliés en pleine basane, dos ornés de fers dorés, filets dorés sur les plats, tranches rouges (reliures de l'époque), (accrocs sans gravité aux coiffes, un mors fendu mais solide) -- Expériences et observations sur différentes d'air : T.1 : 36pp., 434pp., (3), T.2 : (2), 62pp., 297pp., 1 planche dépliante, T.3 : (2), 4pp., 352pp., 5 planches dépliantes, T.4 : 52pp., 404pp., T.5 : (2), 404pp., 4 planches dépliantes -- Expériences et observatons sur différentes branches de la physique : (les ff. 9 à 16 ont été reliés par erreur entre les pp. XVI et XVII de la préface), T.1 : 24pp., 288pp., 1 planche dépliante, T.2 : (2), 312pp., T.3 : 24pp., 527pp., (1pp.), 1 planche dépliante
---- LES DEUX OUVRAGES SONT EN PREMIERE EDITION FRANCAISE ---- BON EXEMPLAIRE EN RELIURES DE L'EPOQUE UNIFORME ---- 1. Expériences et observations sur différentes ESPECES D'AIR : "According to Hoefer "cette traduction fut faite en quelque sorte sous les yeux de l'auteur". It also contains a reprint of a letter to the translator from Priestley in which he says : "Je viens de m'assurer que l'air fixe est une modification de l'acide nitreux. The nature of nitrogen as an element was not recognised until Lavoisier... "Jacques Gibelin's approved translation of the three volumes of Priestley's Experiments and Observations on different kinds of Air. The translator has added letters from Priestley in vols I and III and a translation of Priestley's paper read at the Royal Society Jan. 25, 1776, Observations on respiration in vol. II. The essay presented to the Academie of Sciences by the Duc De Chaulnes on 15 May 1776, Description d'un appareil nouveau (for preparation and collection of gases) is reprinted in vol. III with three plates. The editor has added a few notes, divided a few paragraphs differently and corrected the errata. The list of subscribers in vol. II is interesting, Lavoisier asked for 8 sets". (Cole N° 1067) ---- 2. Expériences et observations sur différentes BRANCHES DE LA PHYSIQUE : "The experimental work of the author is reported in these three volumes... Gibelin's translation of the first and second volumes of Priestley's Experiments and observations relating to various branches of natural philosophy...". (Cole N ° 1064 english ed. & 1068 french translation) ---- "C'est en 1772 que Priestley publia ses premières observations sur différentes espèces d'air. Recueillant les gaz sur la cuve à mercure (1773) il put isoler un grand nombre d'entre eux... Il découvrit aussi l'hydrogène sulfuré, l'oxyde azotique, l'éthylène... Il étudia le gaz carbonique, découvrit la respiration des végétaux. Sa principale découverte fut celle de l'oxygène..." ---- "Dr. Priestley's most important scientific publication, containing accounts of his discoveries of nitric oxide, nitrous oxide (laughing gas, the anaesthetic properties of which were only recognised 28 years later by Sir Humphry Davy), sulphurous acid, carbon dioxide, hydrochloric acid, silicon tetrafluoride, and ammonia gas, while he was the first to collect gases over mercury in his pneumatic trough. It contains moreover his important investigations on the absorption of gases by liquids, and describes his preparation of pure nitrogen ('phlogisticated air') ; but it is most important for his discovery of oxigen ('dephlogisticated air'), a discovery also made, independently of Priestley, by Scheele, and also claimed by Lavoisier...". (Sotheran supp. 2 Tome 1 N° 11805 & 11793) ---- DSB XI pp. 139/147 - Partington III pp. 236/301**4322/ARM4
(London, 1772). 4to. Bound in a fine recent brown hmorocco in old style, gilt back. In: Philosophical Transactions of The Royal Society pp. 147-264 (vol. 62) and 1 folded engraved plate (P.Basire Sc.). A fine large copy, broad margins, printed on good paper, clean and fine throughout.
First edition of this important tract, which marked an epoch in the history of chemistry. As it is Priestley's first extensive work on Gases, it foreshadowed his identification of Oxygen.""The paper here, for which the Royal Society awarded Priestley the Copley medal announced the discovery of hydrochloric acid and nitric oxide and the use of the latter in measuring the purity of air, which led through the work of Cavendish, Fontana and others to exact eudiometry. Priestley also observed that plants consume carbon dioxide and gave out oxygen, thereby purifying air which has been vitiated by combustion, respiration and putrefaction, and that this action takes place only under daylight."" (Printing and the Mind of Man No. 217).""In this paper he also announced two new gases that he had obtained - nitrous oxide and carbonic oxide"" these won him the Royal Society's Copley medal. Two years later his experiments in heating red oxide of mercury produced ""dephlogisticated air"" which was announced in 1775 and identified by Lavoisier as oxygen."" (Dibner Heralds of Science No. 40).The work contains a proposal to saturate water with carbonic acid under either atmospheric or increased pressure, which led to the creation of the mineral-water industry.The Centenary of the discovery of oxygen was celebrated at Priestley's American home at Northumberland, Pennsylvania, and was followed in 1876 by the foundation of the American Chemical Society. (PMM). Honeyman No. 2535 - The Barchas Collection No 1718.
London, Lockyer Davis, 1772, 1775, 1776 & 1783. 4to. In recent marbled paper wrappers. Extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"". Including title-page of volume. Most leaves reinforced in margin. Light offsetting from folded plates as usual. Plate depicting the full telescope with professional repair to lower right corner. Pp. (4), 147-264, 383-394, 225-248, 397-434.
First edition of Priestley's landmark paper on pneumatic chemistry. In this present work, which marked an new epoch in the history of chemistry, he announced the discovery of hydrochloric acid and nitric oxide, as well as the discovery that plants restored air that had been vitiated by combustion, putrefaction, and respiration. Priestley's 'contribution to the knowledge of gases were crucial. He improved the technique for studying them by collecting them over mercury instead of water, so that many more gases could be observed.His many chemical discoveries contributed to the ""chemical revolution""' (PMM)""The paper here, for which the Royal Society awarded Priestley the Copley medal announced the discovery of hydrochloric acid and nitric oxide and the use of the latter in measuring the purity of air, which led through the work of Cavendish, Fontana and others to exact eudiometry. Priestley also observed that plants consume carbon dioxide and gave out oxygen, thereby purifying air which has been vitiated by combustion, respiration and putrefaction, and that this action takes place only under daylight."" (Printing and the Mind of Man No. 217).""In this paper he also announced two new gases that he had obtained - nitrous oxide and carbonic oxide"" these won him the Royal Society's Copley medal. Two years later his experiments in heating red oxide of mercury produced ""dephlogisticated air"" which was announced in 1775 and identified by Lavoisier as oxygen."" (Dibner Heralds of Science No. 40).The work contains a proposal to saturate water with carbonic acid under either atmospheric or increased pressure, which led to the creation of the mineral-water industry.The Centenary of the discovery of oxygen was celebrated at Priestley's American home at Northumberland, Pennsylvania, and was followed in 1876 by the foundation of the American Chemical Society. (PMM). PMM 217. Honeyman No. 2535 - Barchas 1718. Dibner 40 Norman 1749
Bruxelles, 1961 180pp., dans la série "Académie royale des Sciences d'Outre-Mer. Classe des sciences techniques. Mémoires in-8. Nouvelle série" Tome VIII fasc.3, cachet, bon état, C44532
Odile Jacob. 2001. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. 228 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Collection poche Odile Jacob n°54. Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes