Prentice-Hall 1966 in8. 1966. Cartonné.
Bon Etat couverture défraîchie intérieur propre
Kessinger Publishing's Rare Reprints (Putnam) Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 2005 Book condition, Etat : Très Bon paperback, yellow and white printed wrappers In-4 1 vol. - 123 pages
10 plates in black and white, containing numerous illustrations from photomicrographs REPRINT of the 1911 edition Contents, Chapitres : Contents, iv, Text, 119 pages, plates and catalogue Putnam - Foreword and Introduction - Concerning experiments made in 1906 - New experiments initiated in 1909 - The varying effects of high temperatures upon the solutions - Concerning the experimental conditions, the nature of the organisms found in the tubes, their cultivation, and their thermal death-point - Further experiments made in 1910 - Additional experiments made with pure colloidal silica prepared by Graham's method - The thermal death-point of such organisms as have been found in the tubes - The results of the experiments now recorded must be considered to prove the Do Novo origin of living matter - The forms assumed by new-born units of living matter - The solutions employed are not prone to be contaminated by air-borne particles - Does silicon, either wholly or in part enter in the place of carbon into the composition of the protoplasm of the organisms found in the tubes - cf : Origine de la vie fine copy, no markings - year estimated to 2005, no date inside
Leipzig und Berlin, B.G. Teubner, 1914. Orig. hcloth. Spine with gilt lettering. Portrait as frontisp. X,375 pp., 2 portraits, textillustr. and 6 colourplates (4 double-page). Fine and clean.
First German edition of this classic work in biology. The English original was issued 1902. Bateson rediscovered Mendel's papers on heredity and republished them at the end of this work. - Garrison & Morton: 244 (the English ed.)
(London, Harrisn and Sons, 1890). 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"", 1889, Vol. 180 - Series B. Pp. 297-330 and 1 chromolithographed plate. Fine and clean.
First printing of an importent paper in Bateson's scientific career as it deals with central problems in evolutionary theory, the problem of variations. Bateson favours discontinous variations instead of the Darwinian gradual adaptation. Bateson is also famous to for his rediscovery of Mendel's hereditary laws, which he proved holds for animals as well of plants.
P., Stock, 1967, in 8° broché, 155 pages ; couverture illustrée ; illustrations hors-texte.
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Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
Paris, Stock (« Livres de Nature »), 1967. in-8°, 155 pages, 1 cahier illustre n/b, broche, couverture illustree plastifiee à rabats.
Tres bel exemplaire. [CA33-5]
Luzern, Xaver Meyer, 1837, in-8°, X + 596 S. + dazu 8 lose S. ‘Kurze Gebrauchsanleitung...' datiert April 1838, leicht stockfleckig, Locker. Halbleinenband, etwas fleckig, Ecken und Kanten berieben.
Das Werk wurde mit besond. Rücksicht auf die deutsche Schweiz abgefasst. Das sehr reiche Abbildugsmateriel bietet zu allen Bereichen gute Darstellungen. Die Tatsache, dass das Werk viele Tiere und Pflanzen enthält, wie z.B. der Lämmergeier (S. 478 f) oder der Luchs (S. 537 f), macht es zu einem wertvollen Vergleichungswerk gegenüber die Werke aus neuerer Zeit. Der Verfasser war Professor der Naturgeschichte in Luzern.
Phone number : 41 (0)26 3223808
Zürich, Emil Frei, 1949, gr. in-8°, Frontispiz (Erni) + 528 S., reich illustriert in-Text und auf Tafeln, Original-Leinenband, OU.
Facharbeiter: Gaston Borel, Knut Eckner, W.M. Halford, Ernst Magnus, Paul Mathesius, Hermann Matzke. Inhalt: Universum, Himmelskunde, Atomphysik, Mathematik, Organischen, Wesen des menschen, Wirtschaftsleben, Technik.
Phone number : 41 (0)26 3223808
Neuchâtel, Editions de la Baconnière (« Histoire et Société d'Aujourd'hui »), 1949-1953. 2 volumes in-8°, 440-560 pages, figures en n/b, tabl., -, index, broche, couv. à rabats.
Tres bel ensemble. [HA-109/9]
P., Hermann, 1950, un volume in 8 broché, couverture imprimée, 162pp.
---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- ARTICLES ORIGINAUX DE : BETH (E.W.). Decision problems of logic and mathematics - FEYS (R.). Logistique - GONSETH (F.) & MULLER (G.H.). Philosophie mathématique - DESTOUCHES (J.L.). Physique moderne et philosophie - PIVETEAU (J.). Philosophie biologique**7195.O7AR
(London), Journal of Physiology, 1902. Offprint from the Journal of Pysiology. Vol. XXVIII. No. 5, 1902. Pp. (325-) 353, 17 textfigs. Small staples in inner margin, also sewn. A very small stain in lower blank margin.
First edition of the scarce offprint of the paper that fully described the discovery of the first hormone, a milestone in the history of physiology and medicine. The discovery was announced in the Proccedings of the Royal Society in Janauary 1902, on 2 pages. The offered item constitutes the first printing of the paper in full, in which the authors described their milestone discovery, which introduced an entirely new field in physiology and medicine, namely the discovery of the FIRST HORMONE, which they named ""Secretin"". A few years later Sterling coined the word 'hormone' (1905) from the Greek 'hormon', meaning to exite or set into motion. Up until Baylis' and Starlings' discovery, it was thought that the glands, here specifically the pancreas, were controlled by the nerves (e.g. Pavlov and others), but Bayliss and Sterling discovered that the intestine was in fact signaling the pancreas, thereby presenting a COMPLETELY NEW MECHANISM involving a new kind of body or substance functioning as a chemical messenger. ""If nerves are the sprinters of biology, Bayliss & Starling had discovered the marathon runners. In doing so, they also founded the science of hormones, called endocrinology"" (Alan Lightman ""The Discoveries"", p. 34 ff). ""With the discovery of hormones, Bayliss & Starling had found the internal command and control centers - and in this, their discovery was much larger than a new communication system. The mechanism of response and control was chemical: atoms and molecules. Now, with hormones, there was a mechanism for a living thing to regulate itself. Furthermore, with hormones, an organism could not only be studied, but also controlled from the outside... Never had the living body come closer to a machine, a self-regulating machine governed not only by physics, but also by chemistry. And not only a machine, but a machine that we humans could willfully control. At the start of the new century, we still have not come to terms with the implications of this idea."" (Alan Lightman).Parkinson ""Breakthroughs"", 1902 B. - Leicester ""Source Book in Chemistry 1900-1950"", pp. 312-13.
"BAYLISS, W.M. (WILLIAM MADDOCK) & ERNEST H. STARLING. - THE CHEMICAL MESSINGER.
Reference : 49361
(1904)
London, Harrison and Sons, 1904. 8vo. Later full buckram. Spine with gilt lettering. In: ""Proceedings of the Royal Society"", Vol. 73. VIII,548 pp. a. 11 plates. (Entire volume offered). Bayliss & Starling's paper: pp. 310-322. A stamp to edges, otherwise clean.
First printing of this paper in which they developed the theory of hormonal control of the internal secretion, a milestone discovery by Bayliss and Starling in 1902, which introduced a quite new field in physiology and medicine, the discovery of the FIRST HORMONE, which the they named ""Secretin"". They here tries to find out how this new body could be decribed chemically, and one of the conclusions were ""It is not precipitated by tannic acid, thus excluding bodies of alkaloid nature as well as di-amido compounds. This evidence, slight thought it is, points to secretin being a body of relatively small molecular weight and not a colloid. It may be compared to the active principle of the suprarenal glands, adrenalin, which has been obtained in a crystallic form and the cemical constitution of which has been approximately determined...""(p. 314-15).Garrison & Morton: 1121.
ARNETTE 1989 210 pages in8. 1989. Broché. 210 pages. Chaque maison cache un secret les murs ont des oreilles mais la bouche cousue. Il faut poser longtemps la joue contre leur sein comme un docteur fiévreux pour les entendre respirer. A Dun-le-Palestel dans la Creuse la maison de famille du narrateur en a si gros sur le c?ur et tant à dire qu'on va la confesser pièce après pièce l'écouter se raconter souvenirs dérangés vérités arrangées les choses et les gens tels qu'ils furent les échos et les ombres qu'il en reste. Elle finira bien par lâcher cequ'elle sait. Elle sait l'histoire d'un père qui lui avait choisi de se taire
french édition - quelques marques plis de lecture et/ou de stockage mais du reste en bon état. Envoi rapide et soigné dans enveloppe à bulles depuis France
Cambridge University Press Society for experimental biology Reliure d'éditeur 1962 In-8 (16x25 cm), reliure percaline verte d'éditeur, titre, tomaison et éditeur dorés au dos, 372 pages, préface par J. W. L. Beament, prologue de J. W. S. Pringle, ouvrage collectif, schémas dans le texte ; annotation en page de garde, très bon état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
Editions DEFG 2013 48 pages 29x21x1cm. 2013. Broché. 48 pages.
french edition - L'ouvrage qui n'a jamais été lu peut présenter des traces de stockage sur couverture et/ou les pourtours- Idéal pour offrir car Remis Sous blister -envoi rapide et soigné depuis la France dans un emballage adapté
Morlaix, Editions Skol Vreizh, 2011, format 308x230mm, reliure pleine toile noire de l'éditeur, jaquette, 654 pages, nombreuses illustrations dans le texte par Sandra Lefrançois, exemplaire en bon état.
Publié avec le concours de la Région Bretagne, des départements du Finistère, de Loire-Atlantique et du Morbihan.
Thoneins, Imprimerie Ouvriere, 1930. fascicule grand in-8, 48 pp., 2photos n&b, agrafe, couv.
Bon etat. [CA32-1]
P., Masson, 1880; un volume in 8 relié en demi-chagrin noir (reliure de l'époque), (quelques rousseurs), 8pp., 904pp., 570 figures dans le texte, demi-chagrin vert
---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- BON EXEMPLAIRE ---- Des microscopes et de leur emploi - Du sang au point de vue microscopique - Du pus - Des sédiments de l'urine - Du lait au point de vue microscopique - Des parasites - Corpuscules et miasmes de l'air - etc**304.B5DE
Paris, Japperenard - chez l’auteur 1987, 245x200mm, 488pages, reliure d'éditeur. Bel exemplaire.
photos couleurs et n/b,
Angers, Japperenard - chez l’auteur 1990, 245x200mm, 256pages, reliure d'éditeur. Bel exemplaire.
photos couleurs et n/b,
Paris, Gründ, 1984. In-8 (210x150mm) broché, 224 p. Ill. en couleurs. Très bon état général
Academic Press Reliure d'éditeur 1968 In-8 (15.5x23.5 cm), reliure percaline bordeaux d'éditeur, 288 pages, ouvrage en anglais, préface de l'auteur, schémas dans le texte, quelques photographies noir et blanc hors-texte ; coiffes et coins à peine frottés, intérieur frais (hormis annotations en page de garde), bel état. Livraison a domicile (La Poste) ou en Mondial Relay sur simple demande.
ou description de tous les genres d'organes qui composent le corps humain. Paris, Béchet. 1823. In-8 (21x12). XII-728 pages. Reliure inexistante.
Sommaire du cours d' anatomie que lauteur a professé une dizaine d'années. En tête de chaque chapitre, une histoire abrégée des principales découvertes faites sur le système d'organes, qui en est le sujet. Bon état du texte, mais reliure inexistante.
P., Hachette (Bibliothèque des Merveilles), 1928, in 12 broché, 188 pages ; illustrations ; couverture illustrée.
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