Show
206 citations
related to Field work
Show
206 citations
related to Field work as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Article
Marsha L. Richmond
(2020)
South American Fieldwork/Cytogenetic Knowledge: The Cytogenetic Research Program of Sally Hughes-Schrader and Franz Schrader.
Perspectives on Science
(pp. 127-169).
(/isis/citation/CBB089150626/)
Article
Paul Merchant
(2020)
Verticalities in Oral Histories of Science.
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
(pp. 783-796).
(/isis/citation/CBB084065380/)
Article
Marianne Klemun
(2020)
‘Humboldtian Science’ and beyond. The Humboldtian way of seeing and knowing in Vienna and in Franz Unger’s and Friedrich Simony’s earth sciences.
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
(pp. 228-245).
(/isis/citation/CBB712710967/)
Article
Brigid E. Christison; Darren H. Tanke; Jordan C. Mallon
(2020)
Canada's first known dinosaurs: Palaeontology and collecting history of upper cretaceous vertebrates in Southern Alberta and Saskatchewan, 1874-1889.
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
(pp. 184-218).
(/isis/citation/CBB840238544/)
Book
Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia
(2019)
Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan.
(/isis/citation/CBB545620371/)
Article
Jeremy Vetter
(2019)
Explaining Structural Constraints on Lay Participation in Field Science.
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
(pp. 325-327).
(/isis/citation/CBB952096867/)
Book
Robert E. Kohler
(2019)
Inside Science: Stories from the Field in Human and Animal Science.
(/isis/citation/CBB819681602/)
Article
Marie-Andrée Jacob
(February 2019)
Under repair: A publication ethics and research record in the making.
Social Studies of Science
(pp. 77-101).
(/isis/citation/CBB050139593/)
Book
Ian D. Hodkinson
(2019)
Natural Awakenings: Early Naturalists in Lakeland.
(/isis/citation/CBB425907142/)
Article
Jamal Ghavi
(2019)
To explore the unexplored—a geologist's path: A memoir of Jovan Stöcklin (1921–2008).
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
(pp. 403-421).
(/isis/citation/CBB644361659/)
Article
Jenna Tonn
(2018)
Laboratory of Domesticity: Gender, Race, and Science at the Bermuda Biological Station for Research, 1903–30.
History of Science
(pp. 231-259).
(/isis/citation/CBB188270251/)
Article
Meira Gold
(2018)
Ancient Egypt and the Geological Antiquity of Man, 1847–1863.
History of Science
(pp. 194-230).
(/isis/citation/CBB995607914/)
Article
Danielle K. Inkpen
(2018)
The Scientific Life in the Alpine: Recreation and Moral Life in the Field.
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
(pp. 515-537).
(/isis/citation/CBB989071426/)
Book
Michael J. Lannoo
(2018)
This Land Is Your Land: The Story of Field Biology in America.
(/isis/citation/CBB795131285/)
Article
Elizabeth Hennessy
(August 2018)
The politics of a natural laboratory: Claiming territory and governing life in the Galápagos Islands.
Social Studies of Science
(pp. 483-506).
(/isis/citation/CBB243288201/)
Article
Jeremy Vetter
(2018)
Experiential and Cosmopolitan Knowledge: The Transcontinental Field Practices of the U.S. Bureau of Biological Survey.
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
(pp. 18-27).
(/isis/citation/CBB278374867/)
Article
Etienne S. Benson
(2018)
Re-Situating Fieldwork and Re-Narrating Disciplinary History in Global Mega-Geomorphology.
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
(pp. 28-37).
(/isis/citation/CBB725297459/)
Article
Laura J. Martin
(July 2018)
Proving Grounds: Ecological Fieldwork in the Pacific and the Materialization of Ecosystems.
Environmental History
(pp. 567-592).
(/isis/citation/CBB392235914/)
Book
Arthur MacGregor
(2018)
Naturalists in the Field: Collecting, Recording and Preserving the Natural World from the Fifteenth to the Twenty-first Century.
(/isis/citation/CBB816200507/)
Article
Lachlan Fleetwood
(2018)
“No Former Travellers having Attained such a Height on the Earth’s Surface”: Instruments, Inscriptions, and Bodies in the Himalaya, 1800–1830.
History of Science
(pp. 3-34).
(/isis/citation/CBB221245616/)
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