The Lithophylacii Britannicii ichnographia [British figured stones] (1699) by Edward Lhwyd, the second keeper of the Ashmolean Museum, was the first illustrated field guide to English fossils. We analyse this book’s physical creation — the collection of specimens, their engravings and their use and reuse in eighteenth-century editions and collections that were in the transition to binomial taxonomy. With particular concentration on the Lithophylacii’s illustrations of fossils, this paper will first analyse how the specimens were collected. We will then examine the use of these specimens and subsequent editions of Lhwyd’s book, with a focus upon how the relationship between them was drawn on by collectors such as Sir Hans Sloane and Daniel S...
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF BRITISH INSECTS : EXPLAINING THEM IN THEIR SEVERAL STATES, WITH THE PERIODS O...
Despite William Hunter's stature as one of the most important collectors and men of science of the e...
Around 1920, the retired Geological Survey worker Benjamin Neeve Peach (1842-1926) wrote a guide to ...
The Lithophylacii Britannicii ichnographia [British figured stones] (1699) by Edward Lhwyd, the seco...
The British Museum, based in Montague House, Bloomsbury, opened its doors on 15 January 1759, as the...
This paper presents a quantitative and detailed description of the Fossil Lithistida Collection in t...
The relationship between printed books, manuscripts and specimens dominated the practice of natural ...
The Natural History Museum (London) owes its origins to Sir Hans Sloane (1660-1753), a cultured Engl...
Pagination differs from hardbound copy of thesis held at Cambridge University Library.Many histories...
This paper provides a quantitative and general description of the Lyell Collection kept in the Depar...
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF BRITISH INSECTS : EXPLAINING THEM IN THEIR SEVERAL STATES, WITH THE PERIODS O...
In 1799, Matthew Baillie, William Hunter's nephew, published his famous atlas of pathology. It was e...
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF BRITISH INSECTS : EXPLAINING THEM IN THEIR SEVERAL STATES, WITH THE PERIODS O...
Diagnoses of animals, probably written during Linnaeus fil.'s continental tour, starting with Englan...
The paper examines how images, technological-artistic knowledge and theories inter- acted with each ...
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF BRITISH INSECTS : EXPLAINING THEM IN THEIR SEVERAL STATES, WITH THE PERIODS O...
Despite William Hunter's stature as one of the most important collectors and men of science of the e...
Around 1920, the retired Geological Survey worker Benjamin Neeve Peach (1842-1926) wrote a guide to ...
The Lithophylacii Britannicii ichnographia [British figured stones] (1699) by Edward Lhwyd, the seco...
The British Museum, based in Montague House, Bloomsbury, opened its doors on 15 January 1759, as the...
This paper presents a quantitative and detailed description of the Fossil Lithistida Collection in t...
The relationship between printed books, manuscripts and specimens dominated the practice of natural ...
The Natural History Museum (London) owes its origins to Sir Hans Sloane (1660-1753), a cultured Engl...
Pagination differs from hardbound copy of thesis held at Cambridge University Library.Many histories...
This paper provides a quantitative and general description of the Lyell Collection kept in the Depar...
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF BRITISH INSECTS : EXPLAINING THEM IN THEIR SEVERAL STATES, WITH THE PERIODS O...
In 1799, Matthew Baillie, William Hunter's nephew, published his famous atlas of pathology. It was e...
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF BRITISH INSECTS : EXPLAINING THEM IN THEIR SEVERAL STATES, WITH THE PERIODS O...
Diagnoses of animals, probably written during Linnaeus fil.'s continental tour, starting with Englan...
The paper examines how images, technological-artistic knowledge and theories inter- acted with each ...
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF BRITISH INSECTS : EXPLAINING THEM IN THEIR SEVERAL STATES, WITH THE PERIODS O...
Despite William Hunter's stature as one of the most important collectors and men of science of the e...
Around 1920, the retired Geological Survey worker Benjamin Neeve Peach (1842-1926) wrote a guide to ...