Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: Creative Media Partners, LLC Sep 2021, 2021
ISBN 10: 1014520002 ISBN 13: 9781014520005
Anbieter: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Deutschland
Taschenbuch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.
Verlag: Imperial Publishing Company [1909?], New York, 1909
Anbieter: Second Story Books, ABAA, Rockville, MD, USA
Other. Octavo, Cards numbered 63-100 in green slipcase. In Good condition in a Poor slipcase. Slipcase in green cloth; edgewear, shelf wear, missing spine panel, tear to bottom panel. Lacks spine, card edges only. Text block consists of thirty-eight 23 x 18 cm cards each with mounted stereogram and descriptive text. Illustrated: b&w stereograms. Notes in ink on recto of title card. NOTE: Shelved in Netdesk Column Z. 1410397. FP New Rockville Stock.
Verlag: H.M.S.O., London, 1882
Anbieter: Muir Books [Robert Muir Old & Rare Books], PERTH, WA, Australien
Erstausgabe
Leather. 1st edition. 1st ed., quarto, pp.(iii), 192, stamp of Zoology Dept (London) to upper title. page 99 and last text page, 13 full-page sepia lithographic plates, small repair to upper title page and some wear and chipping to edges of last plate, bound in kangaroo skin, gilt ruled and blind-embossed borders, ornate gilt dec spine and gilt titled leather label. Very good condition. Rare. Report on the Scientific Results of the Voyage of HMS Challenger during the years 1873-76. Most of the report relates to the findings on the Thylacine and published as Volume 5 (Zoology) of "Report on the Scientific Results of the Voyage of H.M.S. Challenger". Includes work on Cuscus and Phascogale. The Tasmanian tiger or Thylacine was an iconic Australian marsupial predator that was hunted to extinction in the early 1900's. During H.M.S. Challenger's stay in Sydney in 1874, two specimens (male and female) of the thylacine were presented to the scientists on board by Charles Du Cane, the then Governor of Tasmania and taken back to the British vertebrate zoologist and anatomist, Dr Daniel John Cunningham. Much of what we know today about the internal anatomy of the thylacine is derived from Cunningham's meticulous anatomical dissections and published here in this report. Eight plates (of thirteen) in the report relate to the now extinct Thylacine: Plates I, IV, V, VI, IX, X, XII, XII.