976 resultados para British Columbia Provincial Museum
A guide to the English pottery and porcelain in the Department of British and mediaeval antiquities;
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Edited at first by Robert Walsh, Jr. and then by Eliakim and Squier Littell, the monthly Museum of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art was the leading American eclectic for twenty years. Much of its contents were selected from British magazines; included were reviews, poetry, literary and scientific news, biographical sketches of British authors, lists of new British publications, and articles on literature. The engraved portraits in each number were a popular feature. After 1830, plates were published regularly, and the magazine began to devote a large proportion of its space to serial fiction by Dickens, Reade, Bulwer, Thackeray and other popular English novelists.
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Title from caption.
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Title from caption.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"William Hayes Fogg Art Museum [reprinted from the Report of the president of Harvard College and Reports of departments, 1944-45]": 17 p. inserted.
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A "Royal édition-de-luxe" with 10 additional facsimiles was issued under title: The world̓s great manuscripts.
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Published also as no. 15 of the Reports of the expedition.
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Filmed from the original held by: British Museum.
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"A list of the sources and secondary works cited": p. [141]-145.
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At head of title: Board of education, South Kensington. The National gallery of British art, Victoria and Albert museum.
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Suspended between Oct. 1940 and Mar. 1948.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bog manganese was long ago reported from various places in Columbia county (1:54) and it seemed well to reexamine these occurrences. According to W. W. Mather in his report of the First District Survey, 1836-42, " in the counties of Columbia and Dutchess 50,000 tons of manganese could be procured without any great expense, if carefully prepared." He also stated that some of the bog manganese showed on analysis as high as 68.5 per cent manganese oxide and less than 5 per cent silica. At the direction of the State Geologist the writer has devoted most of the summer of 191 7 to this work. The results of this investigation, though not in any way confirming the quantitative results of Mr Mather, are herewith published as a matter of record and as an account of the manner of the occurrence and the genesis of postglacial bog manganese.