Librería: a2zbooks, Burgin, KY, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 4,83
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoSoftcover. Condición: Good. Reissue. Text appears nice and clean, but may contain minor marks that we missed. Cover has light shelf and corner wear may have bookstore stickers or be former reference copy. Binding is in very good condition. Looks real nice. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Education; ISBN: 0822002566. ISBN/EAN: 9780822002567. Pictures of this item not already displayed here available upon request. Inventory No: 1561033935.
Publicado por Book & Magazine Collector, London, 1986
Librería: Cosmo Books, Shropshire., Reino Unido
Revista / Publicación
EUR 10,35
Cantidad disponible: 6 disponibles
Añadir al carritoBooklet - Unbound Pages. Condición: Very Good. 8 pages, with list of books. An authentic standalone article, extracted from a larger volume. Not a reprint or reproduction, but an original work in its own right. Supplied without title page or cover. Size: 14 x 21 cms. Category: Book & Magazine Collector; Cosmo Books : 29 years on ABE, 47 years taking care of customers. A bookseller you can rely on.
Idioma: Inglés
Publicado por George Huxley
Librería: John Sanders, Holsworthy, DEV, Reino Unido
EUR 9,51
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNo Binding. Condición: Near Fine. 1 Audio CD, Cat # GH 001. The plastic case is intact. The artwork is complete. The disk may have minor marks. Sent within 24 hours. Ref: C1462.
EUR 8,77
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoCondición: Good.
Publicado por Smithsonian Institution, Washington, 1895
Librería: Cosmo Books, Shropshire., Reino Unido
EUR 19,29
Cantidad disponible: 4 disponibles
Añadir al carritoBooklet - Unbound Pages. Condición: Very Good. Gill surveys Thomas Huxley's contributions to zoology, evolutionary theory, and public science, emphasising his role as an educator and advocate for scientific thought. 41 Pages, 1 plate. An authentic standalone article, extracted from a larger volume. Not a reprint or reproduction, but an original work in its own right. Preserved in a modern card cover, prepared for practicality - an unassuming but serviceable presentation that favours function over finery. Size: 16 x 24 cms. Category: Smithsonian Institution; Cosmo Books : 29 years on ABE, 47 years taking care of customers. A bookseller you can rely on.
Publicado por London, Richard and John E. Taylor, 1849
Librería: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 153,65
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoSoft cover. Condición: Very Good. Thomas Henry Huxley. Huxley's First Paper (aged 24). "On the anatomy and the affinities of the family of the medusae" extracted from the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Richard and John E. Taylor, vol 139, 1849. This is the entire article, pp 413-34, with three plates. This copy has been cleaned up, with the spine nicely mended with Japan tape, and the whole being sewn-in to new wrappers of high-quality paper. VERY GOOD. Nice copy. [++] "Perhaps no class of animals has been so much investigated with so little satisfactory and comprehensive result as the family of the Medusae, under which name I include here the Meduoe, Monostomaoe and Rhizostomioe; and this, not for the want of patience or ability on the part of the observers (the names of Ehrenberg, Milne-Edwards, and De Blainville, are sufficient guarantees for the excellence of their observations), but rather because they have contented themselves with stating matters of detail concerning particular genera and species, instead of giving broad and general views of the whole class, considered as organized upon a given type, and inquiring into its relations with other families. 2. It is my intention to endeavour to supply this want in the present paper with what success the reader must judge. I am fully aware of the difficulty of the task, and of my own incompetency to treat it as might be wished; but, on the other hand, I may perhaps plead that in the course of a cruise of some months along the east coast of Australia and in Bass s Strait I have enjoyed peculiar opportunities for investigations of this kind, and that the study of other families hitherto but imperfectly known, has done much towards suggesting a clue in unravelling many complexities, at first sight not very intelligible."--from the first paragraph of the Huxley paper. [++]"Already in his first work "On the Anatomy and the Affinities of the Medusæ,' 1849, he directed attention to the very important point, that the body of these animals is constructed of two cell layers of the Ectoderm and the Endoderm and that these, physiologically and morphologically, may be compared to the two germinal layers of the higher animals."--Clark University website "While Huxley was on the Rattlesnake in 1849, the Royal Society of London published his paper On the Anatomy and the Affinities of the Family of the Medusae. In this paper, Huxley added to the comparative embryological discoveries of Karl Ernst von Baer, professor at the University of Königsberg in Königsberg, Prussia who had asserted that vertebrates from different species appeared similar as they passed through stages of embryological development. Adult jellyfish, Huxley found, were made of two cell layers. When Huxley compared the tissue layers of these adult marine organisms to the germ layers of vertebrate embryos, he noticed that the vertebrate embryos exhibited the same double-tissued structure in the early stages of development as the adult jellyfish. By drawing parallels between the body plan of adult jellyfish and the body plan of embryonic vertebrates, Huxley inferred a connection between organismal development, called ontogeny, and historical relationships between taxa, called phylogeny. The relationship between ontogeny and phylogeny would be adopted and elaborated over the following years by Charles Darwin in London, and by Ernst Haeckel, the Professor of Comparative Anatomy at the University of Jena in Jena, Germany."--Embryo Encyclopedia Project (ASU) (Huxley). 714,3.
Publicado por Richard and John E. Taylor, London, 1849
Librería: JF Ptak Science Books, Hendersonville, NC, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 131,70
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoNo Binding. Condición: Very Good. Thomas Henry Huxley. Huxley's First Paper (aged 24). "On the anatomy and the affinities of the family of the medusae" extracted from the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Richard and John E. Taylor, London, vol 139, 1849. This is the entire article, pp 413-34, with three plates. Disbound. Nice copy. [++] "Perhaps no class of animals has been so much investigated with so little satisfactory and comprehensive result as the family of the Medusae, under which name I include here the Meduoe, Monostomaoe and Rhizostomioe; and this, not for the want of patience or ability on the part of the observers (the names of Ehrenberg, Milne-Edwards, and De Blainville, are sufficient guarantees for the excellence of their observations), but rather because they have contented themselves with stating matters of detail concerning particular genera and species, instead of giving broad and general views of the whole class, considered as organized upon a given type, and inquiring into its relations with other families. 2. It is my intention to endeavour to supply this want in the present paperwith what success the reader must judge. I am fully aware of the difficulty of the task, and of my own incompetency to treat it as might be wished; but, on the other hand, I may perhaps plead that in the course of a cruise of some months along the east coast of Australia and in Bass's Strait I have enjoyed peculiar opportunities for investigations of this kind, and that the study of other families hitherto but imperfectly known, has done much towards suggesting a clue in unravelling many complexities, at first sight not very intelligible."--from the first paragraph of the Huxley paper. [++]"Already in his first work "On the Anatomy and the Affinities of the Medusæ,' 1849, he directed attention to the very important point, that the body of these animals is constructed of two cell layersof the Ectoderm and the Endodermand that these, physiologically and morphologically, may be compared to the two germinal layers of the higher animals."--Clark University website "While Huxley was on the Rattlesnake in 1849, the Royal Society of London published his paper "On the Anatomy and the Affinities of the Family of the Medusae." In this paper, Huxley added to the comparative embryological discoveries of Karl Ernst von Baer, professor at the University of Königsberg in Königsberg, Prussia who had asserted that vertebrates from different species appeared similar as they passed through stages of embryological development. Adult jellyfish, Huxley found, were made of two cell layers. When Huxley compared the tissue layers of these adult marine organisms to the germ layers of vertebrate embryos, he noticed that the vertebrate embryos exhibited the same double-tissued structure in the early stages of development as the adult jellyfish. By drawing parallels between the body plan of adult jellyfish and the body plan of embryonic vertebrates, Huxley inferred a connection between organismal development, called ontogeny, and historical relationships between taxa, called phylogeny. The relationship between ontogeny and phylogeny would be adopted and elaborated over the following years by Charles Darwin in London, and by Ernst Haeckel, the Professor of Comparative Anatomy at the University of Jena in Jena, Germany."--Embryo Encyclopedia Project (ASU) (Huxley).