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Paris-Journal

G. Planchon, La dynastie des Geoffroy, apothicaires de Paris, Journal de pharmacie et de chimie 8, 1898, 289-293 and 337-345 Olivier Lafont, Peronnalisation des rapports individu-puissance publique ou Geoffroy et la famille Le Tellier, Revue d histoire de la pharmacie 38, 1991, 15-23. [Pg.485]

Planchon, G. La dynastie des Geoffroy, apothicaires de Paris. Journal de... [Pg.586]

P. C. Paris and F. Erdogan. A Critical Analysis of Crack Propagation Laws , Journal of Basic Engineering, Trans. ASME, Vol. 85, 1963, p. 528-534. [Pg.533]

Person, A., Bocherens, H., Saliege, J.-F, Paris, F., Zeitoun, V. and Gerard, M. 1995 Early diagenetic evolution of bone phosphate an x-ray diffractometry analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science 22. 211-221. [Pg.114]

Brugnone, E, Maranelli, G., Zotti, S., Zanella, I., De Paris, P., Caroldi, S., and Betta, A. (1992) Blood concentration of carbon disulfide in "normal" people and after antabuse treatment, British Journal of Industrial Medicine, 49 658-663. [Pg.17]

OGJ OLADE OECD OPEC OSPAR Oil Gas Journal Latin American Energy Organization Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries Oslo Paris Commission for the Protection of the Marine Environment of the North East Atlantic... [Pg.667]

By common agreement among many historians of science, "chemistry" and "physics" became fairly well demarcated communities or disciplines around 1830, some hundred years before the founding of the Journal of Chemical Physics2 This was about the time that Auguste Comte was embarking on his Cours de philosophie positive, in which he laid out a hierarchy of the positive sciences as he observed them in contemporary Paris. In this hierarchy, the mastery of mathematics and physics was historically and foundationally prior to chemistry. [Pg.21]

This was the period during which Deville, Berthelot, Moissan, and other leading French chemists had persisted in the use of an outmoded chemical notation abandoned elsewhere. 16 By 1870 or so, the equivalent notation had disappeared in chemical journals outside France. French atomists sometimes used the tactics of the Sorbonne organic chemist Friedel, who wrote acetylene dichloride as C2H2C12 for the Berichte of the Berlin Chemical Society but C4H2C12 for the Comptes rendus of the Paris Academy of Sciences. 17... [Pg.161]

Auger, J., Kunstmann, J. M., Czyglik, F. and Jouannet, P. (1995). Decline in semen quality among fertile men in Paris during the past 20 years. New England Journal of Medicine 332, 327—8. [Pg.186]

Catherine II Journal intimi du Chevalier de Corberon, chargl d affaires de France en Russie, 2 vols., Paris, 1901, v. 1, p. 211. [Pg.260]

Guerrero Davalos S, Fournier G, Boucher F, Paris M, Contribution to thesmdy of Mexican marihuana. Preliminary studies Cannabinoids and essential oA, Journal de Pharmacie de Belgique 32 89—99, 1977. [Pg.68]

Paris, M., Porcelloni, M., Binaschi, M. and Fattori, D. (2008) Histone deacetylase inhibitors from bench to dinic. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 51, 1505—1529. [Pg.262]

About this time Priestley visited Paris, saw Lavoisier, and told him of the new "air" he had obtained by heating calcined mercury. Lavoisier saw the great importance of Priestley s discovery he repeated Priestley s experiment, and concluded that the air, or gas, which he refers to in his Laboratory Journal as "fair dephlogistique de M. Priestley" was nothing else than the purest portion of the air we breathe. He prepared this "air" and burned various substances in it. Finding that very many of the products of these combustions had the properties of acids, he gave to the new "air" the name oxygen, which means the acid-producer. [Pg.75]

Citrin, P. H. Journal de Physique (Paris) C8, colloque 8, tome 47, (1986) p. 437, proceedings of the Inti. Conf on EXAFS and Near edge Structure IV, Fontevraud, France 1986... [Pg.118]

Chandesris, D., Roubin, P., Rossi, G., Lecante, J. Surf. Sci. 57, 169 (1986) Chandesris, D. Journal de Physique (Paris), Ecole d Aussois de Rayonnement Synchrotron, Aussois, France 1986. (in french)... [Pg.118]

For several years Bussy taught pharmacology in the medical school at the Ecole de Pharmacie, and in 1856 he served as president of the Academy of Medicine. For fifty-six years he served on the editorial staff of the Journal de Pharmacie et de Chimie. He died at Paris on February 1, 1882, at the age of eighty-seven years (22). [Pg.527]

The overall research activity on soluble ferments, that is on enzymatic reactions, is scarce in this period nevertheless seen as important (Berthelot, 1857, 1864). Thus in the German Journal fur Praktische Chemie , in the period from 1850 to 1860 no paper dealt with soluble ferments (enzymatic activities) and 8 papers were published on fermentation (Gahrang, with the meaning of microbial activity) in the Bulletin de la Societe Chimique de Paris, one of the most important of the time for fermentation research, there was published about one article per year in the 1860 s dealing with soluble ferments, which signifies enzyme activity, and 3 to 4 dealing with fermentation (Table 1.2). It was only in the 1880 s that research and publication activities rose significantly. [Pg.5]

J. Prakt. Chem Journal fur Praktische Chemie Bulletin Bulletin de la Societe Chimique de Paris... [Pg.8]

GeoflFroy went on to describe how he distilled green vitriol in a cracked crucible so that the Volatile sulphureous acid spirit of vitriol [sulfur dioxide] could escape, all this following the procedure of Stahl. GeoflFroy advised his readers who wanted this explained to consult Stahls original paper in the Journal of Halle in Saxony.Georg Ernst Stahl (1660-1734) is the inventor of the phlogiston theory that we will be centrally concerned with a little later. This reference to Stahl in 1713 is the earliest that I have found in the Paris Academy Memoires. [Pg.92]

Stahl also published a number of papers in the various journals of the time, hence his views on phlogiston were available in France to those who could read the German and Latin, often mixed, in which they were written. Let us now look to see how these ideas appeared among the chemists of the Paris Academy of Science. [Pg.104]

Veyne, P. (1983) Les Greet ont-ils cru a leurs mythes Paris Seuil. Winston, G. (1980) Addiction and backsliding, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 1,295-324. [Pg.34]

Gas-Baby, N., Laffont, J. and Labat, R. (1967). Physiological and histological proof of the regeneration of the cardiac branch of the vagus nerve in the carp. Journal de Physiologie, Paris 59,39-42. [Pg.272]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.227 ]




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