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Livres anciens et modernes

Sowerby (James) Sowerby (James De Carle) & Sowerby (George Brett, Ingham)

The Mineral Conchology of Great Britain; or Coloured Figures and Descriptions of those remains of Testaceous Animals or Shells, which have been preserved at various times and depths in the Earth.

London: Printed by Benjamin Meredith [and others], 1812-29.,

16243,76 €

Forest Books William Laywood

(Grantham, Royaume-Uni)

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Détails

Auteur
Sowerby (James) Sowerby (James De Carle) & Sowerby (George Brett, Ingham)
Éditeurs
London: Printed by Benjamin Meredith [and others], 1812-29.
Thème
NATURAL HISTORY CONCHOLOGY NATURAL SCIENCE SHELLS MALACOLOGY

Description

First edition, 6 vols., large 8vo (233 x 144 mm), engraved portrait frontispiece, complete with 611 hand-coloured engraved plates, each with a letterpress description (numbered 1-609: including 33 and 184 bis; 22 folding; plate 231 misnumbered 131), index at rear of each volume, volume 6 with ëSystematic, Stratigraphical, and Alphabetical Indexes to the First Six Volumes. To which is added a Short Account of the Life of the Authorí (with separate title-page dated 1834) at rear, the stratigraphical indexes apparently each headed ëSupplementary Indexí and bound separately into the relevant volumes, volume 2 with addenda leaf (íAdditional Localities to Shells Described in Vols. I. and IIí, volumes 4-6 each with corrigenda leaf, volumes 5-6 without the ëSupplementary Indexí or the ëLife of the Authorí (these not found in other copies examined), neat repair to pp. 45/6 of volume one, some occasional light offsetting and spotting, later half morocco by Riviere & Son for Henry Sotheran, spines sunned and marked, t.e.g. Sowerbyís detailed illustrations of his own fossil collection, accompanied by his engaging writing style, made his Mineral Conchology of Great Britain a classic in the field. In it, he names numerous new species and palaeontologists still cite his work in their publications. ìIt is still considered the supreme work of British topographical mineralogy. It is certainly the most ambitious colorplate work on minerals ever published.îóConnklin. Sets of the first six volumes with all the plates as here are notably rare, this is a nice clean and crisp set. A seventh volume, containing 39 plates and never completed, appeared much later, in 1846. Nissen ZBI 3917; Ward & Carozzi 2093. Conklin, James Sowerby, his publications and collections, 1995.
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