Scholarly Publishing
Found in 107 Collections and/or Records:
Correspondence to Sir Archibald Geikie: W[illiam] G[rylls] Adams to Paul Apfelstedt, 17 November 1860 - 01 December 1900
The Correspondence to Sir Archibald Geikie: W[illiam] G[rylls] Adams to Paul Apfelstedt sub-series consists of:
- 20 letters to Sir Archibald Geikie, alphabetically arranged (1860-1900)
Correspondence:Henry Hyatt Howell to Arthur Roope Hunt, 1884-1909
The Correspondence: Henry Hyatt Howell to Arthur Roope Hunt sub-series consists of:
- 22 letters, alphabetically arranged (1884-1909)
Cuttings, 1913-1961
Press and other cuttings relating primarily to publications (including posthumous) by Donald Macpherson Baillie.
Departmental (general), 1966-1990
includes material relating to managing the staff and facilities of the department, organising events, monitoring research and liasing with students
- brochures
- correspondence
- telephone number lists
- publications lists
- reports
- newsletters
Diary of Readings, c1950
Handwritten manuscript of, Diary of Readings, which was published in 1955, with 'spare' pages.
Independent African: George Shepperson and Thomas Price, 1957-1981
Interpretation of Religion, 1927-1939
Correspondence and royalty reports from publishers (Charles Scribner's Sons and T & T Clark) and correspondence with friends, colleagues and other readers relating to Interpretation of Religion ( 1929).
Invitation to Pilgrimage, 1943-1944
Correspondence with publishers (Oxford University Press) and correspondence with friends, colleagues and other readers relating to Invitation to Pilgrimage ( 1942).
Journal of General Microbiology, 1958-1971
- correspondence
- guidelines to those intending to publish articles in their Journal of General Microbiology.
- samples
Letter from Hugh Miller to Alexander Rose, c1845
Letter from Hugh Miller to Alexander Rose regarding articles written by the former, the most recent relating to limestone and he promises to send Rose samples. He remarks on astronomical geologists and their view of religion, specifically creation.