955 resultados para Tower cranes
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Reprint of the original published in London by J.B. Bland, 1914-1916; by Times Pub. Co., 1917-1957.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Includes index.
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Later vols. published by the Athlone Press for the Greater London Council.
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"Of this edition on large paper 100 copies are printed, with proofs of the plates."
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Signatures: A-E⁴ F².
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"Wessex edition."
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"Credit is largely due to Frank D. Graham ... for the authorship of the Guides, and for the original sketches illustrating electrical principles and construction."--Pref. to no. 1.
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"Av detta arbete utgives samtidigt en numrerad bibliofilupplaga i 80 exemplar."
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v. 1. Book I: The betrothal. Book II: The espousals. - v. 2. Book I: Faithful for ever. Book II: The victories of love. Tamerton Church-tower, and other studies in verse.
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III. Novels of ingenuity: v. 14. Desperate remedies.--v. 15. The hand of Ethelberta.--v. 16. A Laodicean.--v. 17. A changed man, [The waiting supper, and other tales: concluding with the Romantic adventures of a milk-maid] Poetical works.--v. 18. Wessex poems and other verses; poems of the past and the present.--v. 19. The Dynasts; parts 1st and 2d.--v. 20. The Dynasts, part 3d. Time's laughingstocks.--v. 21. Satires of circumstance; Moments of vision and Miscellaneous verses.
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"Correction and addendum."
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"SID-CC VII & XI."
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In 2004, both Illinois EPA and U.S. EPA investigated the location of a former battery cracking and recycling operation in Gilberts. The main site is located immediately north of the intersection of Railroad and Mill Streets bounded to Galligan Road on the east and the Chicago and Northwestern Railway on the west. It is in an area that is mostly wooded near both industrial and residential properties. Lead acid batteries were cracked open to recover the lead. Some of the lead seeped into the ground along with acid contained in the batteries. Extensive environmental sampling last summer identified a six-acre area of gross contamination (mainly lead). Later, a second area of contamination was discovered to the southwest, where the Village of Gilberts Public Works building is now located, west of the railroad tracks - this is known as the Tower Hill Road site.