IMPR. CHARRUEY. Non daté. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 236 pages en 4 fascicules. Premier plat illustré en couleurs. Nombreux schémas en noir et blanc dans le texte. Annotations au crayon gris. Quelques pages détachées.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
VUIBERT. 1929. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Plats abîmés, Mors fendus, Intérieur acceptable. 549 pages - nombreux schémas noir et blanc dans le texte - piqûres de vers sur le 2eme plat - 1er plat désolidarisé. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
préface de M. GF. Urbain Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Faculté de médecine et de pharmacie de Bordeaux. 1955. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 28 pages dactylographiées - plats tâchés - petite déchirure en pied sur le 1er plat et une petite annotation - annotations au stylo à l'intérieur de l'ouvrage - déchirures sur de nombreuses pages altérant la lecture.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Paris Librairie Polytechnique Baudry 1896 In8 126 pages - 11 figures dans le texte - cartonnage defraichi sans gravité - bon etat general
Bon
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique - INRA , Colloques Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1997 Book condition, Etat : Bon hardcover, editor's white and green binding grand In-8 1 vol. - 525 pages
many black and white illustrations, mainly figures and graphics 1st edition, 1997 legere mouillure claire au coin inférieur des pages (coin un peu gondolé, cela ne concerne pas le texte), sinon bon état, cartonnage très propre, bien complet du CD-rom joint.
Paris, Chez Bernard, 1806. Contemp. hcalf. Spine gilt and with gilt lettering. Wear to top of spine.Slightly rubbed. Stamp to verso of titlepage. In: ""Annales de Chimie, ou Recueil de Mémoires concernant la Chemie"" Tome 60. 336 pp., 1 engraved plate. (Entire volume offered). Proust's papers: pp. 185-224, 225-252, 260-279.
Also with papers by Vaguelin, Parmentier, humphrey Davy (transl. into French), Riffault etc.
PROUST, (JOSEPH LOUIS) - THE DISCOVERY AND ISOLATION OF GRAPE-SUGAR.
Reference : 45517
(1806)
Paris, Chez Bernard, 1806. No wrappers. Ectracts from ""Annales de Chimie ou Recueil de Mémoires.."" Vol. 57. Pp. 131-174 a. pp. 225-272. With the titlepage to volume 57.
First appearance of a classic paper in which Proust describes his discovery of Grape.Sugar and the identificationof this with glucose. He investigated the varieties of sugar that occur in sweet vegetable juices, distinguishing three kinds, and he showed that the sugar in grapes, of which he announced the existence to his classes at Madrid, is identical with that obtained from honey by the Russian chemist J. T. Lowitz.Proust is famous for his work on the steadiness of composition of chemical compounds.""In chemistry, the law of definite proportions, sometimes called Proust's Law, states that a chemical compound always contains exactly the same proportion of elements by mass. An equivalent statement is the law of constant composition, which states that all samples of a given chemical compound have the same elemental composition. For example, oxygen makes up 8/9 of the mass of any sample of pure water, while hydrogen makes up the remaining 1/9 of the mass. Along with the law of multiple proportions, the law of definite proportions forms the basis of stoichiometry.""(Wikipedia).
Paris, 1811-14. 4to. Contemp. hcalf, richly gilt spine. A paperlabel pasted on lower part of spine. The second leaf with stamps. These 9 papers from ""Journal de Physique, de Chimie et D'Histoire Naturelle"", Tome 70-78, pp. 320-340, pp. 113-126, pp. 266-281, pp.14-36, pp. 376-400, pp. 203-220, pp. 362-392, pp. 334-352 and pp. 169-206. Widemargined, a few scattered brownspots. Some leaves in lower right corner with a wormtract, no loss of letters.
First printing of these 9 papers by the wellknown French chemist. Proust formulated the ""Law of constant proportion"" which lead to the controversy with Berthollet.
(London, W. Nicol, 1827). 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"" 1827 - Part II. Pp. 355-388 a. 2 engraved plates. (a small dampstain to lower margin of plates). Text clean and fine.
First printing of this milestone paper, containing the first scientific classification of foodstuffs as carbonhydrates, fats, proteins, and water.""The brilliant demonstration in 1824 that the gastric juices of animals contains hydrochloric acid appeared incredible to many of Prout's contemporaries. Yet in 1827 (in the paper offered) they readily adopted his classification of foodstuffs into water, saccharinous (carbonhydrates), oleagineous (fats), and albuminous (proteins). Although Prout promised detailled analyses of the three organic aliments, only those of the saccharinous class were published by him. As a vitalist, Prout maintained that organized bodies (which were composed from organic substances) contained ""independent existing vital principles.""Under the influence of these teleological agents, the four aliments were transformed into blood and tissues. Prout termed the process of digestion and blood formation ""primary assimilation."" ""Secondary assimilation"" (Liebig's ""metamorphosis of tissues"") included both the process of tissue formmation from blood and the destruction and removal of unwanted parts from the animal system. The absorption and removal of water from processed aliments were the principal chemical features of chylification and sanguification, respectively. Organization of processed aliments could not occur, however, without the presence and admixture of minute amounts of water or of elements other than carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. In 1827 Prout coined the word (in the paper offered) ""merorganized"" to denote the isomerism and vitalization of organic substances by the presence of these incidental materials.""(DSB XI, p. 173). - Parkinson ""Breakthroughs"" 1827 C.
Paris, Crochard, 1827. Contemp. hcalf. Gilt lettering on spine. In: ""Annales de Chimie et de Physique, Par MM. Gay-Lussac et Arago."", 2 Séries, Tome 36.. Entire volume offered. 448 pp. a. 1 folded engraved plate. Prout's paper: pp. 366-378. Some scattered brownspots.
First French edition (simultaneously with the English original ""On the ultimate composition of simple alimentary substances"".."") of this milestone paper, containing the first scientific classifilassification of foodstuffs as carbonhydrates, fats, proteins, and water.""The brilliant demonstration in 1824 that the gastric juices of animals contains hydrochloric acid appeared incredible to many of Prout's contemporaries. Yet in 1827 (in the paper offered) they readily adopted his classification of foodstuffs into water, saccharinous (carbonhydrates), oleagineous (fats), and albuminous (proteins). Although Prout promised detailled analyses of the three organic aliments, only those of the saccharinous class were published by him. As a vitalist, Prout maintained that organized bodies (which were composed from organic substances) contained ""independent existing vital principles.""Under the influence of these teleological agents, the four aliments were transformed into blood and tissues. Prout termed the process of digestion and blood formation ""primary assimilation."" ""Secondary assimilation"" (Liebig's ""metamorphosis of tissues"") included both the process of tissue formmation from blood and the destruction and removal of unwanted parts from the animal system. The absorption and removal of water from processed aliments were the principal chemical features of chylification and sanguification, respectively. Organization of processed aliments could not occur, however, without the presence and admixture of minute amounts of water or of elements other than carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. In 1827 Prout coined the word (in the paper offered) ""merorganized"" to denote the isomerism and vitalization of organic substances by the presence of these incidental materials.""(DSB XI, p. 173). Parkinson ""Breakthroughs"" 1827 C.The volume contains an importent pioneer-investigation on piezo-electricity by ANTOINE CÉSAR BECQUEREL ""De quelques Phénoménes électriques produits pa la pression et le clivage des cristaux"", pp. 265-271.
"(PROUT, WILLIAM). - ""PRIMA MATERIA"" FOUND - PROUT'S HYPOTHESIS.
Reference : 42993
(1815)
London, Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1815. 8vo. No wrappers as extracted from ""Annals of Philosophy...by Thomas Thomson"", Vol. VI, July to December, 1815. Titlepage to vol. VI a. pp. (321-)330 incl. 3 tables. Titlepage with a few brownspots.
First appearance of a milestone-paper in the history of chemistry and atomic theory as Prout here set forth - coupled with experimental evidences - the theory that the elements seems to have atomic weights that are whole number multiples of the atomic weight of hydrogen and that all elements is in some way a combination of hydrogen atoms. The theory announced here in Prout's first paper on the subjecy, is called PROUT'S HYPOTHESIS, and it was ""not until the twentieth century that new views of the atom, arising out of the Second Scientific revolution of the 1890s, revitalized the notion. As a result of the work of Soddy and Aston a new form of Prout's hypothesis was established and Prout was found to be not wrong, but merely a century premature.""(Asimov).""The concept of a primary substance as the basis of all matter has a tempting simplicity which has appealed to thinkers from the classic Greek age to our own day. The idea was revived in a new garb in 1815-1816 by a London physician, Willia Prout, who observed that with few exceptions the specific gravities of elementary gases (i.e., their atomic weight) were evenmultiples of of that of hydrogen. The experimental errors in the data then available were such asto make the hypothesis appear plausible. Prout concluded, therefore, that hydrogen isthe fundamental constituent from which all other elements are compounded....... his idea that all matter is composed of tyhe same material is now established.""(Leicester & Klickstein in ""A Source Book in Chemistry 1400-1900"", p. 275 ff.). - See also note to PMM 407, entry Moseley The Atomic Table.
"(PROUT, WILLIAM). - ""PRIMA MATERIA"" FOUND - PROUT'S HYPOTHESIS.
Reference : 46918
(1815)
London, Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1815 a. 1816. 8vo. Bound in 2 ciontemp. full moiré cloth, rebacked. Endpapers renewed. Spine gilt and with gilt lettering. In: ""Annals of Philosophy...by Thomas Thomson"", Vol. VI, July to December, 1815 and Vol. VII January-June 1816. VIII,480 pp. a. 6 plates + VIII,488 pp. a. 10 plates. Some brownspots to plates and offsettings from plates, not affecting Prout's papers. Prout's papers: pp. 320-330 a. pp. 111-113. Internally clean.
First appearance of a milestone-paper in the history of chemistry and atomic theory as Prout here set forth - coupled with experimental evidences - the theory that the elements seems to have atomic weights that are whole number multiples of the atomic weight of hydrogen and that all elements is in some way a combination of hydrogen atoms. The theory announced here in Prout's first paper on the subjecy, is called PROUT'S HYPOTHESIS, and it was ""not until the twentieth century that new views of the atom, arising out of the Second Scientific revolution of the 1890s, revitalized the notion. As a result of the work of Soddy and Aston a new form of Prout's hypothesis was established and Prout was found to be not wrong, but merely a century premature.""(Asimov).""The concept of a primary substance as the basis of all matter has a tempting simplicity which has appealed to thinkers from the classic Greek age to our own day. The idea was revived in a new garb in 1815-1816 by a London physician, Willia Prout, who observed that with few exceptions the specific gravities of elementary gases (i.e., their atomic weight) were evenmultiples of of that of hydrogen. The experimental errors in the data then available were such asto make the hypothesis appear plausible. Prout concluded, therefore, that hydrogen isthe fundamental constituent from which all other elements are compounded....... his idea that all matter is composed of the same material is now established.""(Leicester & Klickstein in ""A Source Book in Chemistry 1400-1900"", p. 275 ff.). - See also note to PMM 407, entry Moseley The Atomic Table.Parkinson ""Breakthroughs"", 1816 C.
Paris, Cedic, Nathan, 1984, in 8° broché, 314 pages.
PHOTOS sur DEMANDE. ...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
ECOLE CENTRALE DES ARTS & MANUFACTURES. 1956. In-4. Relié toilé. Très bon état, Couv. fraîche, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 245 pages. Reliure pleine toile marron, avec pièce de titre en cuir.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Dunod. 1970. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 412 pages augmentées de nombreuses photos et figures en noir et blanc dans et hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
DUNOD. 1975. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 412 pages illustrées de nombreux schémas et quelques photos en noir et blanc.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Masson et Cie, éditeurs 1896 2 volumes. In-8, reliures demi-chagrin havane, dos à nerfs, filets dorés, caissons ornés de fers dorés, XXXII-623, 137 figures dans le texte ; XVI-832 pp., 41 figures dans le texte, table alphabétique des matières. Reliures frottées, rousseurs éparses, mouillure continue angulaire sur les 300 dernières pages du Vol. II.
Vol. I : Composés minéraux. - Vol. II : Composés organiques. Bon état d’occasion
édité par : l'union des producteurs et des consommateurs pour le développement de l'industrie des matières colorantes en France sans date circa 1900/1910 format à l'italienne : 12.5 x 21 cm, 196 pages, couverture de percaline verte. couverture tachée, quelques annotations manuscrites bon état
prévoir 10 euros de frais d'envoi pour la France métropolitaine
Masson et cie.. 1961.. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 427 pages. Nombreux schémas en noir et blanc, dans le texte. Tampon sur la page de garde.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Cours de chimie. Licence ES-Sciences. Préface du Pr G. Chaudron. Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Centre de documentation universitaire. 1959. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Agraffes rouillées, Papier jauni. 82 pages agrafées - quelques figures en noir et blanc dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Centre de documentation universitaire. 1959. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Agraffes rouillées, Papier jauni. Paginé de 235 à 327 - pages agrafées - quelques figures en noir et blanc dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Paris, Librairie J.-B. Baillière et Fils, 1907. Un vol. au format in-12 (188 x 123 mm) de viii - 396 pp. + catalogue éditeur in fine. Reliure d'édition de plein cartonnage moutarde à l'imitation de maroquin, filets en noir portés sur chacun des plats, le premier est en outre agrémenté d'un fleuron en noir ainsi que du titre frappé en noir, dos lisse orné de filets dorés, titre en noir, tranches mouchetées.
L'ouvrage s'agrémente de nombreuses figures dans le texte. ''Dans ce livre, nous nous sommes efforcés d'exposer d'une façon claire et précise les différentes transformations que subissent les matières premières en suivant autant que possible l'ordre des opérations.'' Plats présentant un éclat légèrement altéré. Frottements affectant les mors. Du reste, bonne condition.
Non précisé. 1948. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 60 pages. Etiquette de code sur le 1er plat. Tampons et annotations de bibliothèque sur le 1er plat et en page de titre.. . . . Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Thèse prés. à la Faculté des Sciences de l'Univ. de Fribourg. Classification Dewey : 540-Chimie et sciences connexes
Ch. Fouraut 448 pages in12. Sans date. demi basane. 448 pages.
Bon Etat
Presses Universitaires de France - P.U.F. , Que Sais-Je ? Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1963 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché In-8 1 vol. - 125 pages
1ere édition Contents, Chapitres : Notions fondamentales - Les acides nucléiques - Les protéines - Les phosphates riches en énergie - La délocalisation électronique et les phénomènes de la vie - Aspects électroniques des réactions enzymatiques - Structure électronique et activité cancérogène des substances chimiques - Vers une pharmacologie électronique - Bibliographie sommaire papier uniformement jauni, sinon bon etat - format de poche