Elsevier publishing company 1970 in8. 1970. Cartonné jaquette. 2 volume(s).
Bon état jaquettes défraîchies intéieurs propres bonne tenue
Scref Patrick Caro Michèle Lelièvre-Lesec Françoise Alkan Gilles
Reference : 500082430
(1993)
ISBN : 9782210102323
Magnard 1993 1x28x19cm. 1993. Broché.
Très bon état - légères marques de lecture et/ou de stockage mais du reste en très bon état- expédié soigneusement depuis la France
Paris, Technique et Documentation Lavoisier, 1988. grand in-8, XXVIIIpp.-905pp. - schémas & graphiques. Cartonnage de l'éditeur couleur jaune.
- Bon état.
Beauchemin In-8 Couverture souple Montréal 1952
Très bon 216 pages. Signature d'un ancien propriétaire en page de garde. Causeries radiodiffusées de ce vulgarisateur scientifique.
Paris, Paul Lechevalier, 1942-1949.- Cet ouvrage constitue les tomes 33 et 34 de la collection "Encyclopédie du naturaliste" - 2 volumes in-12 de CCCXX, 126, (1)pages et 20 planches, puis de (4), p.CCCXXI à DCCCXVI ; et, de II. (6)pp., 182 planches (dont 24 en couleurs) suivies de pages 930 à 1062, cartonnages illustres.
Cette encyclopédie pratique du microscope, appliquée à l'Histoire Naturelle, s'adresse "à ceux qui ne connaissent du microscope que sa qualité d'instrument grossissant". Tres bel ensemble, tres frais. [TX-16+HA109-5] Tres bel ensemble, tres frais.
Feldmeielen, Vontobel-Druck, o.J. (um 1935). Farbiger Offsetdruck. Bildformat: 65 x 90 cm.
Schulwandbild. - Oberer Rand teilweise mit Klebband verstärkt.
Herzogenbuchsee, Ernst Ingold, 1970. Farbiger Offsetdruck auf Papier auf Leinen aufgezogen. Bildformat: 90 x 65 cm.
Schw. Schulwandbild Nr. 147. - Knitterfaltig, fleckig, wenige kleinere Schadstellen.
(Paris, Bachelier), 1848. 4to. No wrappers. In: ""Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Séances de L'Academie des Sciences"", Tome 26, No 8. Pp. (233-) 264. (Entire issue offered). Semmelweis's paper: pp. 254-255. Clean and fine.
First French announcement of this epochal event in the history of medicine, the discovery of the etiology and prevention of childbed fever. First announce by Ferdinand von Hebra in December 1847, then followed (only 2 months) after by the French announcement.""Although Semmelweis's importent discoveries were made in the 1840s, he did not publish them immediately. The first printed reports of his findings were written by his collegues and were published in various German, French, or English Journals. Semmelweis himself gave three lectures before the Imperial and Royal Medical Society of Vienna in 1850 but did not publish his complete discussion of ""The etiology, concept, and prophylaxis of childbeed fever"" until 1861, having previously contributed several shorter accounts to Hungarian medical journals.""(Norman ""One Hundred Books famous in Medicine"", p. 265).Semmelweis demonstrated that puerperal fever (also known as childbed fever) was contagious and that this incidence could drastically be reduced by appropriate hand washing by medical care-givers. He made this discovery in 1847 while working in the Maternity Department of the Vienna Lying-in Hospital. His failure to convince his fellow doctors led to a tragic conclusion. However, he was ultimately vindicated. While employed as assistant to the professor of the maternity clinic at the Vienna General Hospital in Austria in 1847, Semmelweis introduced hand washing with chlorinated lime solutions for interns who had performed autopsies. This immediately reduced the incidence of fatal puerperal fever from about 10 percent (range 5-30 percent) to about 1-2 percent.Toward the end of 1847, accounts of Semmelweis's work began to spread around Europe. Semmelweis and his students wrote letters to the directors of several prominent maternity clinics describing their recent observations. Ferdinand von Hebra, the editor of a leading Austrian medical journal, announced Semmelweis's discovery in the December 1847 and April 1848 issues of the medical journal. Hebra claimed that Semmelweis's work had a practical significance comparable to that of Edward Jenner's introduction of cowpox inoculations to prevent smallpox.Garrison & Morton: 6275 (German version).
Leipzig, Engelmann, 1912. Contemp. hcloth. VIII,203 pp.
Genève, Chirol, 1775, 2 TOMES reliés en 1 volume in 8, demi-basane, dos lisse orné de fers et filets dorés (reliure de l'époque), T.1 : 20pp., 244pp., T.2 : (2), 324pp.
---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- BEL EXEMPLAIRE ---- "Two of SENEBIER's publications can still repay attention today : his research on photosynthesis and his works on the experimental method, which he defined with precision fifty years before Claude BERNARD... SENEBIER's Art d'observer (1775) is impressive for the closeness of his thought to that of Claude BERNARD and for the degree to which the ideas expressed in BERNARD's Introduction à l'étude de la médecine expérimentale were formulated in the work of Senebier". (DSB XII pp. 308/309)**4735/A1
Genève, Chirol, 1783, un volume in 8 relié en pleine basane marbrée, dos orné de fers dorés, tranches rouges (reliure de l'époque), (plats très légèrement épidermés), 32pp., 385pp.
---- EDITION ORIGINALE de ce second écrit de SENEBIER sur la photosynthèse ---- BEL EXEMPLAIRE ---- "SENEBIER WAS THE FIRST TO OBSERVE THAT IN SUNLIGHT SUCH PLANTS ABSORB CARBONIC ACID GAS AND EMIT OXYGEN WHILE MANUFACTURING A SUBSTANCE WITH A CARBON BASE". (DSB XII pp. 308/309) ---- "Sénébier published several works dealing with photosynthesis. He showed that leaves in water, in the absence of light, do not allow the air they contain to escape, that the quantity of air produced is proportional to the light intensity (except during the first few hours), and that all the green parts of plants, not only the leaves, furnish air.... Sénébier proved by experiments with the nitric oxide eudiometer that the bubbles emitted under the influence of light consist of oxygen (dephlogisticated air) and he proved that the leaves perform their function also when they are isolated from the plant... Sénébier's experiments were repeated and confirmed by Ingen Housz...". (Partington III pp. 280/283)**4734/A2
1947 Alger, Institut Pasteur d'Algérie, 1947; in-8° broché, couverture crème illustrée, titre en noir et rouge au 1er plat et dos; 293pp. Très nombreuses illustrations dans le texte, XVIII planches et IV cartes hors texte. Couverture un peu poussiéreuse, avec petites rousseurs. Quelques passages soulignés au crayon.
Exemplaire du Professeur Langeron, avec envoi autographe signé de Edmond Sergent sur le 1er feuillet blanc. (GrD2)
P., Denoël et Steele (Collection Tableau du XXe siècle, 1900-1933), 1933, fort in 8° broché, 499 pages.
PHOTOS sur DEMANDE. ...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
P., Denoël et Steele, 1933, in 8° broché, 499 pages ; couverture fanée avec petites déchirures en queue du dos (fendu).
PHOTOS sur DEMANDE. ...................... Photos sur demande ..........................
Phone number : 04 77 32 63 69
SERLE, William - MOREL, Gérard J. - Traduit et adapté par Gérard J. Morel - Illustrations de Wolfang Hartwig
Reference : 78539
(1988)
1988 Editions Delachaux et Niestlé - 1988 - In-12, cartonnage illustré de l'éditeur - 331 pages - Très nombreuses illustrations en couleurs et en N&B hors texte
Bon état - Dos légèrement insolé - Menus frottements sur le cartonnage
Alpen éditions 2012 96 pages 21x14x1cm. 2012. Poche. 96 pages.
French edition. le livre présente des trace d'usure ou de stockage mais reste en très bon état d'ensemble. Envoyé dans un emballage adapté depuis le France
Greece, Efstathiadis Group, 2006, pt. in-8vo, Original ill. paperback.
Phone number : 41 (0)26 3223808
East Lansing, Michigan Academy of science, 1909, un volume in 8 relié en pleine toile éditeur, (accroc à la partie inférieure du dos), (3), 181pp., figures dans le texte
---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- Marshal (E.). The beginnings of life from the view point of a bacteriologist - Ruthven (A.). The theory of orthogenesis - Case (E.C.). American paleontology and neo-lamarkism - Dandeno (J.B.). Mutuel interaction of plant roots ; Osmotic theories with special reference to Vant'Hoff's law ; Investigations on the toxic action of bordeaux mixture - Hegner (R.W.). The germ cell determinants of chrysomehd - N.A. Harvey. The influence of darwinism upon psychology - ETC**1551/A4
AMPHORA 2020 256 pages 21 8x25 4x2 2cm. 2020. Broché. 256 pages.
Comme neuf - L'ouvrage qui n'a jamais été lu pourrait présenter de légères traces de stockage - expédié soigneusement dans emballage adapté -
Gallimard 2011 528 pages 21x15x4cm. 2011. Broché. 528 pages.
French édition - Le livre qui n'a jamais été lu présente de petites marques de stockage sur la couverture et/ou les pourtours mais du reste en très bon état d'ensemble. Expédition soignée depuis la France dans un emballage adapté
Paris, ESHEL, 1988. 16 x 24, 380 pp., broché, bon état.
Paris, Flammarion, 1994. 11 x 18, 429 pp., broché, très bon état (sauf dos insolé).
"Traduction d'Yves Bonin; nouvelle préface et épilogue inédits."
Masson Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1993 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée éditeur blanche, illustrée d'une figure noire en médaillon grand In-8 1 vol. - 430 pages
très nombreuses figures dans le texte en noir et blanc 2eme tirage corrigé Contents, Chapitres : Table et remerciements, xvi, Texte, 414 pages - Structure et dynamique structurale - Transports et couplages énergétiques - Récepteurs - Translocation et insertion des protéines - Bibliographie et index legers accrocs sur le plat supérieur de la couverture, coins un peu émoussés, sinon bon état, intérieur frais
Editions du Rocher 1992 270 pages 15x24x2cm. 1992. Broché. 270 pages.
Bon état de conservation cependant couverture défraîchie bords un peu frottés intérieur propre
"SHERRINGTON, CHARLES SCOTT. - A MILESTONE WORK IN NEUROPHYSIOLOGY COINING ""RECIPROCAL INNERVATION"".
Reference : 46446
(1898)
(London, Harrison and Sons, 1898). 4to. No wrappers as extracted from ""Philosophical Transactions"", Volume 184, Section B + Volume 190 - Series B. - Pp. 641-763, textillustrations and 11 plates (10 photographic) and pp. 45-186, textillustr. a. 4 plates. Clean and fine.
First appearance of these groundbreaking papers in modern neurophysiology by ""the most important neurophysiologist Britain has produced, and perhaps the most remarkable neuroscientist ever to have lived."" (Grolier Club ""One Hundred Books famous in Medicine"", p. 326). - ""The experiments on reflex action carried out by Pavlov and by Sherrington provided a foundation for the objective treatment of human psychological problems, in particular the theory of behaviourism.""(PMM: 397, listing Sherrington's book from 1906). ""The data, terms, and concepts that he introduced have become such a fundamental part of the neuroscience that it is perhaps not surprising their authorship is often forgotten: such terms as proprioceptive, nociceptive, recruitment, fractionation, occulusion, myotatic, neuron pool, motoneuron, and synapse, and such concepts as the final common path, the motor unit, the neuron threshold, central excitatory and inhibityory states, proprioception, reciprocal innervation, and the integrative action of the nervous system.""(DSB).""His first steps (in investigation of the nervous system) were to concentrate upon the reflex functions of the cord rather than on the more complex field of the brain" to choose an appropriate experimental animal, the monkey" and to make parallel control and comparison experiments on lower forms to establish the necessary points of anatomical knowledge... Sherrington's basic method was to study simple motor acts which could be made to occur in isolation, correlating his exacting analyses of input-output relations of reflex responses with anatomical and histological data... The effects of decerebration had been partially described by many earlier workers, such as Magendie, Bernard, and Flourens, but it was Sherrington who named decerebrate rigidity and, in a fundamental paper of 1898 (the paper offered) and later publications, established it as a phenomenon in its own right and as a major tool for examining the reflex functions of the spinal cord, particularly the nature of inhibition... He first used the term ""reciprocal innervation"" (in the paper offered), read before the Royal Society on 21 January 1897"" the term he explained, denoted the ""particular form of correlation"" in which one muscle of an antagonistic couple is relaxed as its mechanical opponent actively contracts... Four months later, as the Royal Society's Croonian lecturer, he proposed his classic definition of riciprocal innervation as that form of of coordination in which ""inhibito-motor spinal reflexes occur quite habitually and concurrently with many of the excito-motor."" (DSB XII, pp. 402-3). - This lecture is printed as part IV of the second paper offered.Sir Charles Scott Sherrington's research, spanning more than 50 years, laid the foundations for modern neurophysiology. He maintained that the most important function of the nervous system in higher animals is the coordination of the various parts of the organism. Although best known for his long series of studies on spinal reflexes, he made equally great strides in the physiology of perception, reaction, and behaviour. He was the first to adequately study the synapse and originated the term. He also introduced the term exterioceptor, proprioceptor and viscerocepter. In 1932 he shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Edgar Douglas Adrian.