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168 citations
related to Professional activities of scientists -- 19th century
Show
168 citations
related to Professional activities of scientists -- 19th century as a subject or category
Description Term used during the period 2002-present
Article
Nathan Edward Charles Smith
(2023)
Fertile substrate: The rise, fall, and succession of popular microscopy in Great Britain.
Annals of Science: The History of Science and Technology
(pp. 268-292).
(/isis/citation/CBB730463894/)
Article
Kevin J. Edwards
(2023)
Hidden in Plain Sight: Overlooked Evidence Concerning James Croll (1821–1890).
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
(pp. 160-173).
(/isis/citation/CBB734778518/)
Article
Michael Wiescher
(2023)
A German physicist’s travels in Great Britain: Julius Plücker’s visits from 1853 to 1866.
Annals of Science: The History of Science and Technology
(pp. 143-194).
(/isis/citation/CBB463128936/)
Article
Barry Sturman; David Garrioch
(2023)
Amateur Science and Innovation in Fireworks in Nineteenth-Century Europe.
Ambix: Journal of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry
(pp. 109-130).
(/isis/citation/CBB895927620/)
Article
Peter Reed
(2023)
George E. Davis: Editing the Chemical Trade Journal, 1887–1906.
Ambix: Journal of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry
(pp. 131-149).
(/isis/citation/CBB429027865/)
Article
Ulrich Päßler
(2022)
A Prusso-French Connection: The Scientific Friendship between Alexander von Humboldt and François Arago.
Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences
(pp. 192-207).
(/isis/citation/CBB671072516/)
Article
Jenny Beckman
(2022)
Competition and coordination in Swedish botanical publication, 1820–79: Eleven editions of Hartman’s Handbook.
History of Science
(pp. 211-231).
(/isis/citation/CBB154384419/)
Book
Matthew Wale
(2022)
Making Entomologists: How Periodicals Shaped Scientific Communities in Nineteenth-Century Britain.
(/isis/citation/CBB883076998/)
Article
Elías Fuentes Guillén; Davide Crippa
(2021)
The 1804 examination for the chair of Elementary Mathematics at the University of Prague.
Historia Mathematica
(pp. 24-54).
(/isis/citation/CBB710675257/)
Article
H. Meiring
(2021)
Scientific patronage in the age of Darwin: The curious case of William Boyd Dawkins.
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
(pp. 267-282).
(/isis/citation/CBB464840736/)
Article
A. Desmond; A. Darwin
(2021)
T. H. Huxley’s turbulent apprenticeship years: John Charles Cooke and the John Salt scandal.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 215-226).
(/isis/citation/CBB807422529/)
Article
M. A. Taylor
(2021)
The unusual printing and publishing arrangements of Hugh Miller (1802–1856).
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 298-309).
(/isis/citation/CBB717020040/)
Article
Fabio Lusito
(2021)
Science Outside Academies: An Italian Case of “Scientific Mediation”—From Joule’s Seminal Experience to Lucio Lombardo Radice’s Contemporary Attempt.
Foundations of Science
(pp. 757-790).
(/isis/citation/CBB601448284/)
Article
Janis Antonovics; Mary Gibby; Michael E. Hood
(2021)
John Leigh, Lydia Becker and Their Shared Botanical Interests.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 62-76).
(/isis/citation/CBB258332860/)
Article
Theodore W. Pietsch
(2021)
Two unpublished photographic portraits of the American conchologist William Harper Pease (1824–1871).
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 175-178).
(/isis/citation/CBB214830850/)
Article
Jennifer Connor
(2021)
An Author’s Delusion in Victorian Canada: Richard Maurice Bucke and Transnational Publishing of Popular Science.
Scientia Canadensis: Journal of the History of Canadian Science, Technology, and Medicine
(pp. 1-28).
(/isis/citation/CBB126151710/)
Article
Mattes, Johannes
(2021)
“Central nodes” and “neutral grounds:” boundary-work between scholarship, scientific amateurism and the public in Vienna (1860-1890).
Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza.
(/isis/citation/CBB267101748/)
Article
Joris Mercelis
(2020)
The scientist and the advertisement: Reklamegutachten in imperial Germany.
History of Science
(pp. 507-532).
(/isis/citation/CBB621920403/)
Article
Moore, P. G.
(2020)
Frederick William Flattely (1888–1937): Naturalist and “Renaissance Man”.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 356-360).
(/isis/citation/CBB984728116/)
Article
Debra J. Lindsay
(2020)
The limits of imperial influence: John James Audubon in British North America.
Archives of Natural History
(pp. 302-318).
(/isis/citation/CBB716257904/)
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