13 posts categorized "New Acquisitions"

September 09, 2011

New Acquisitions in the National Air and Space Museum Library

 Here are some of the newest additions to the National Air and Space Museum Library collection.

Ambassadors from Earth: Pioneering Explorations with Unmanned Spacecraft by Jay Gallentine.  University of Nebraska Press,Lincoln, Nebraska 2009.  TL795.3 G35 2009

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Edwards Air Force Base (Images of Aviation) by Ted Huetter and Christian Gelzer. Arcadia Publishers, Charleston, South Carolina, 2010.  TL568. E34 H84 2010

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Empire of the Clouds: When Britain's Aircraft Ruled the World by James Hamilton-Paterson.  Faber, London, England, 2010.  HD9711. G72 H36 2010

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Hot Air Balloons: History, Evolution and Great Adventures by Jean Becker.  White Star/Vercelil, London, England, 2009.  fGV762. B43 2009

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Out of Production List: Western Jet Airliners edited by M. Falcus.  DestinWorld, Durham, England, 2009.  TL685.7  O98 2009

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Women Military Pilots of World War II: A History with Biographies of American, British, Russian and German Aviators by Lois K. Merry.   McFarland and Company, Jefferson, North Carolina, 2011.  D785. M47 2011
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World's Fastest Four-Engine Piston-Powered Aircraft: Republic ZR-12 Rainbow by Mike Machat.  Specialty Press, North Branch, Minnesota, 2011.  TL686. R42 M33 2011
 

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Leah Smith

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September 06, 2011

New "Astronomical" Acquisition

The Dibner Library of the History of Science and Technology recently enriched its collection with an intriguing 16th century work in astronomy, Christop Clavius’s In sphaeram Ioannis de Sacro Bosco commentarius. Romae, 1570. Apud Victorium Helianum.

Clavius1

This first edition of Clavius’s commentaries on Sacrobosco’s Sphaera opens a fascinating window into the transitional time period of the early scientific revolution: the change from the earth-centered to the heliocentric world view, from Ptolemaism to Copernicanism. The basic text of this book, Joannes de Sacrobosco’s (fl. ca. 1230) Sphaera was the most widely used astronomical resource of the late Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period and went through literally hundreds of editions inspiring many commentaries. Although the end of the Ptolemaic era was marked by Copernicus’s revolutionary work, De revolutionibus (1543), it was not until the publication of Kepler’s Astronomis nova (1609) and Galileo’s Sidereus nuncius (1610) that the heliocentric theory began to achieve broader acknowledgement. The period between 1543 and 1610, as a result, is a particularly fascinating one. Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) still represented a geo-heliocentric system and Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) and Galileo began his observations and researches continuing the work of Copernicus. Clavius, meanwhile, was the most compelling astronomical voice in support of geocentricism.

Christoph Clavius (1538-1612), was perhaps the most distinguished mathematics professor of his generation at the Collegio Romano, the principal Jesuit seminary and college. He produced two extremely popular textbooks and he also served on the papal commission on calendar reform that would produce the Georgian calendar. After Galileo visited Clavius in Rome in 1587 they corresponded and Clavius, cautiously though, but mentioned in the later editions of his commentaries on the Sphaera, the new invention, the telescope. He also described there some of the observations Galileo made with the telescope, such as about the “roughness” of the surface of the Moon, and the moons (“stars”) of the Jupiter. Clavius’s edition of the Sphaera was an extremely important book, and according to modern historians is the “greatest of all Sphere commentaries” (Lattis, Between Copernicus and Galileo, p. 37). The copy the Libraries has purchased bears extensive marginal annotations and intertextual mathematical calculations of several early readers, and would doubtless reward further study.

Clavius2
The book is richly illustrated. A woodcut of armillary sphere decorates the title-page, three half-page and many smaller woodcut illustrations and diagrams are in the text. There are also woodcut initials of various sizes and styles.

The Dibner Library of the History of Science and Technology, the oldest rare book collection of the Smithsonian Libraries, holds the 1585, 1591, 1607, and 1608 editions of Clavius’s work and numerous other examples of the Sphere-literature. Having purchased the first edition of Clavius completes the holdings on this title in a very valuable way: covering the intriguing time period between Copernicus and Galileo.

—Hosea Baskin & Lilla Vekerdy

August 16, 2011

New Acquisitions in the National Air and Space Museum Library

Here are some of the newest additions to the National Air and Space Museum Library collection.

Air Transport Provision in Remoter Regions edited by George Williams and Svein Brathen.   Farham, Surrey, England; Burlington, Vermont: Ashgate, 2010.  HE9785. A39 2010

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Airlines of the Jet Age: A History  by R.E.G. Davies.  Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press, Washington, DC, 2011.   TL720. D28 2011

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The Barnstormer and the Lady: Aviation Legends Walter and Olive Ann Beech.  Rockhill Books, Kansas City, Missouri, 2010.  TL515. F37 2010

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Conquering the Sky: The Secret Flights of the Wright Brothers at Kitty Hawk by Lary Tise.  Palgrave Macmillan, New York, New York, 2009.  TL540. W7 T569 200938977549

The Farthest Shore: A 21st Century Guide to Space  edited by Joseph N. Pelton and Angelia P. Bukley.  Apogee Books, Burlington, Ontario.  QB500. F37 2010

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Imagining Mars: A Literary History by Robert Crossley.  Wesleyan University Press, Middletown, Connecticut, 2011.  PN3433. 6 C 76 2011

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Into the Blue: Uniforms of the United States Air Force, 1947 to the Present by Lance P. Young.  Schiffer Military History, Atglen, Pennsylvania, 2011.   UG1163. Y68 2011

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Unravelling Starlight: William and Margaret Huggins and the Rise of the New Astronomy by Barbara J. Becker.  Cambridge University Press, New York, New York, 2011.  QB35. B43 2011

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—Leah Smith

 

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August 05, 2011

New Arrivals in the Natural History Library/Museum Studies Reference Library

Here are some of our most recent items to be added to the Natural History Library/Museum Studies Reference Library.

Hallofwonders

The great American hall of wonders: art, science, and invention in the nineteenth century, by Claire Perry. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian American Art Museum; London  In association with D Giles Ltd., 2011

"Published in conjunction with the exhibition Great American Hall of Wonders, on view at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C., from July 15, 2011 through January 8, 2012."

E169.1 .P443 2011 Museum Studies Reference Library Smithsoniana

Expeditions
Scientific exploration and expeditions: from the age of discovery to the twenty-first century, by Neil A. Hamilton. Armonk, N.Y. : Sharpe Reference, c2010

Q115 .H167 2010 Natural History Reference

OriginCharles Darwin: after the Origin, by Sheila Ann Dean. Ithaca, N.Y.: Paleontological Research Institution and Cornell University Library, 2009.  Paleontological Research Institution special publication; no. 34

QH31.D2 D465 2009 Natural History

 

Seeing
Seeing further: the story of science, discovery, and the genius of the Royal Society, edited & introduced by Bill Bryson. New York, NY: William Morrow, c2010

Q41 .S44 2010 Museum Studies Reference Library

 

Polly Lasker

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