By the period ¡700–¡799, the list includes Corbet, Corsar, Clugstone, Cassels (Kassel, a town in Germany), Hosie (Hosiah), Hassock, Ja›ray (Geo›rey), Oliphant (from “elephant”), Peacock, Runciman, Rattray, Salmond (Soloman) and Yoole ...
The sugar-refiner Henry Tate, best known now for his foundation of the Tate Gallery, spent over £30,000 on public library benefaction in Streatham (where he lived), Balham, Brixton, and Lambeth; and the Edinburgh-based publisher Thomas ...
The Encyclopedia of Caves and Karst Science contains 350 alphabetically arranged entries.
"A novel portraying a group of dedicated recreational swimmers and what happens when a crack appears at the bottom of their community pool."--
Covering both the social and scientific history of medicine, this 2006 volume traces the chronology of key developments and events, engaging with the issues, discoveries, and controversies that have characterized medical progress.
This book not only identifies the primary concerns in con tinuing medical education, but also offers sound recommendations and effective solutions and suggests future directions and approaches.
We have not long to live in any event. Let us spend what is left in seeking the unpeopled world behind the sunrise.' And as they quarrelled he caught up the Knife of Stone which lies there on the table and would have fought with his ...
Essays and Criticisms
William Cronon, “A Place for Stories: Nature, History and Narrative,” Journal ofAmerican History 78, 4 (1992): 1347-76; Cronon's well-known injunction encouraged environmental historians to tell “not just stories about nature, ...
See Georgina Boyes, The Imagined Village (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1993), p. 105. Cantwell, “When We Were Good,” p. 57. MacKinnon, The British Folk Scene, pp. 19, 40, 53. Boyes, The Imagined Village, p.