Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Pacific Northwest National Parks Association, Spokane, Washington, 1981
Da: Henry E. Lehrich, Bethesda, MD, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Soft Cover Colored Wraps. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: NoNE ISSUED. 1st Edition. 59 pages. stapled wraps . no writing no foxing no tearing blue paper covers b/w illustrations and photos pages very white and clean. see pictures.
Editore: U.S. Department of the Interior, 1990
Da: Charles Berry, Bookseller, Lakeport, CA, U.S.A.
Soft cover. Condizione: Good. Large softcover in good condition, with three blemishes: 6cm taped slice on the front cover, spine slightly age-yellowed, small spot on the top page edges, otherwise unmarked. 264 pages, plus 7-page appendix. [1.5 lbs]. Book.
PAPERBACK. 1st edition. 110pp. b/w illustrations. quarto. slight wave to page block, tight binding, clean throughout, Very Good-.
Editore: Pacific Northwest National Parks Association, 1981
Da: Easton's Books, Inc., Mount Vernon, WA, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condizione: NF. Paperback in Near Fine condition. . 4to 11" - 13" tall. 59 pages. * Quick Shipping * All Books Mailed in Boxes * Free Tracking Provided *.
Editore: Studio International London, United Kingdom, 1974
Da: Specific Object / David Platzker, New York, NY, U.S.A.
251 pp.; 30.7 x 24.1 cm.; glue bound; black-and-white & color; edition size unknown; unsigned and unnumbered; offset-printed; May 1974 issue of Studio International edited by Peter Townsend. Contents include: "The Complete Artist," by John McEwen; "2 Fisherman: 1. An Appreciation of C.M. Wells," by J.W. Chance and "2. Ivan Marks: fishing as a profession;" "Correspondence;" "Acanthonemus Lubaurus Fossil;" "The Fish as a Symbol," by Cara Montgomery; "Multiple Exercise," by William Allan; "Sea Grant second narrative and two precedent works," by Newton Harrison; "Char and char fishing," by Geoffrey White; "Feuilleton," by Marcel Broodthaers; "The paintings of Joseph Raffael," by William S. Wilson; "A/S Mowi: industrial fish farming;" "Man's Impact on life in inland waters," by H.A. Hawkes; "Recipes," by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Marcello Salvadori; and X-ray of a flounder" and reviews by Clive Phillpot, Malcolm LeGrice, John Walker, Liesbeth Corstius, Keith Albarn, Günther Wirth, R.C. Kenedy, David Troostwyck, Tony Rothon, Judy Marle, Paul Rosenbloom, Fenella Crichton, Christopher Fox, James Faure Walker, Robert Corbett, and Frank Whitford. Cover specifically designed for this issue by James Sneath. Also includes a ten page artist project by Hamish Fulton presented by Robert Self, presumably paid for as an advertisement in the magazine and not presented as editorial content. Good. Bumping of corners with creasing. 5.7 cm. area of writing in pencil on recto. 4 mm. tear to bottom right corner of verso and two 8 mm. tears across spine. Yellowing of pages. Contents clean and unmarked.
Editore: University of Idaho, 1977
Da: Easton's Books, Inc., Mount Vernon, WA, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condizione: VG+. Paperback in Very Good+ condition. . 4to 11" - 13" tall. 241 pages. University of Idaho Anthropological Research Manuscripts Series, No. 39. Rebound with coil binding. . * Quick Shipping * All Books Mailed in Boxes * Free Tracking Provided *.
Editore: Office of Public Archaeology, Institute for Environmental Studies, University of Washington,, Seattle, WA:, 1976
Da: Zephyr Used & Rare Books, Vancouver, WA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
4to. viii, 306, [3] pp. With maps, photo illustrations, text illustrations, diagrams, plates, 1 large folding Kanaka Village stratigraphy map in rear pocket. Stiff colour-illustrated softcovers, cover art from plate scrap and rivets Hudson's Bay Co. (minor bumping to couple corners, edgewear), still a VG bright copy. First edition of this surprisingly uncommon and detailed archaeological study examining the Indigenous Hawaiian's who worked and lived at the Hudson's Bay Company Fort Vancouver along the Columbia River, when the area was still the Oregon Country, controlled by Great Britain. The majority of the Hudson's Bay Hawaiian employees lied in their own village several hundred feet southeast of the Fort along the Columbia, possibly established before 1829, and consisted at their height of at least 122 male Hawaiians. They and their families served as labor force, worked the farm, and also labored in the Fort itself.