Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
By Earthscan Publications Ltd..
Sells new for $115.00.
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No comments about Metal 95: Proceedings of the International Conference on Metals Conservation, Semur en Auxois, France, September 1995.
Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
By McGraw-Hill Professional Publishing.
There are some available for $135.75.
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1 comments about Twentieth Century Building Materials: History and Conservation.
- Well-written, concise compendium of common and uncommon building materials used over the past 100 years. Architects will find this a valuable resource for the in-depth information on material history, fabrication, and use, especially for architects working with older buildings. I wish there were more books dealing so explicitly with materials the way this one does.
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Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
Written by Jeffrey W. Cody. By Routledge.
The regular list price is $58.95.
Sells new for $51.30.
There are some available for $51.18.
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No comments about Exporting American Architecture 1870-2000 (Planning History and the Environment Series).
Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
Written by Craig B. Smith and Zahi Hawass and Mark Lehner. By Smithsonian.
The regular list price is $27.95.
Sells new for $9.90.
There are some available for $4.39.
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4 comments about How the Great Pyramid Was Built.
- I have asked many people and read diferent versions of just how the pyrqmids were build. This seems to be the most plausable one and one I can relate to. Having climbed around on them and wondered just how many hands had been involved, I now have some answers to my questions.
- Craig B. Smith is not only an amazing man, but an excellent writer! I was fascinated by this book and the exceptional information it contained. I highly recommend it!
- This is a great book! It is well written, covers a fascinating subject in an interesting manner, and is clear enough for non-engineers and scientists to enjoy.
Using modern engineering systems and concepts, Mr. Smith explores,in depth,the many issues involved in building the Great Pyramid at Giza. He covers the design, the materials and their transport, the actual construction, and the labor. As an added bonus, the author provides substantial information about ancient Egyptian life and death and explains how their culture affected the design and construction of the Great Pyramid.
Throughout the book, Mr. Smith lays out the known facts (with attributions), the conclusions he draws from those facts, and, most importantly, the reasoning that leads him to his conclusions.
For anyone who has ever wondered how an ancient society, lacking most modern tools and knowledge, was able to build a structure on this grand scale and have it last for 4,000 years, this is the book for you.
- The reader will have one question in mind after finishing "How the Great Pyramid Was Built": is this a book about Ancient Egypt, utilizing the tools of project management? Or a book about project management, using the Great Pyramid as an extended example? However, the answer is probably moot. Both project managers and Egyptophiles will gain excellent insights from reading Craig Smith's book. Dr. Zahi Hawass, the director of the Supreme Council of Antiquities in Egypt, provides the foreword. The analysis of the necessary infrastructure and the organization of the workforce is throrough and engrossing.
This book is not for the alternative theorist, but rather for the historically- and archaeologically-minded reader. One minor quibble: Smith appears to assume that the Egyptians knew that a triangle with sides of unit length 3, 4, and 5 would form a right triangle, whereas Richard Gillings (Mathematics in the Time of the Pharaohs) firmly rejects this notion. Still, they would seem to have had some sort of square or carpenter's ell. The first chapter, a general historical survey of ancient Egypt, does not add anything new, but is a good reminder for the casual reader and serves to anchor the building of the Great Pyramid in its historical era. All in all, a fascinating analysis that belongs on the shelves of both project managers and those interested in Egypt's most famous monument.
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Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
By Earthscan Publications Ltd..
Sells new for $115.00.
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No comments about Metal 98: Proceedings of the International Conference on Metals Conservation, Draguignan, France, May 1998.
Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
Written by Nahoum Cohen. By McGraw-Hill Professional.
There are some available for $38.21.
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No comments about Urban Planning Conservation and Preservation.
Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
Written by Dinah Eastop and Kathryn Gill. By Butterworth-Heinemann.
The regular list price is $101.00.
Sells new for $69.79.
There are some available for $69.99.
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No comments about Upholstery Conservation: Principles and Practice (Butterworth - Heinemann Series in Conservation and Museology).
Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
Written by Adrian Stokes. By Pennsylvania State University Press.
The regular list price is $41.00.
Sells new for $36.90.
There are some available for $51.64.
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No comments about The Quattro Cento: And, Stones of Rimini (British Art and Visual Culture Since 1750: New Readings).
Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
Written by Robert Pickard. By Taylor & Francis.
The regular list price is $94.95.
Sells new for $94.92.
There are some available for $70.00.
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No comments about Policy and Law in Heritage Conservation (Conservation of the European Built Heritage Series, 1).
Posted in Art and Photography (Saturday, May 17, 2008)
Written by John A Hussey. By Printed by Abbott, Kerns & Bell Co.
There are some available for $50.00.
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1 comments about The history of Fort Vancouver and its physical structure.
- This hand-inked numbered edition was printed by Washington Historical Society in cooperation with the National Park Service. Only 1,000 were created. It's a tall volume with a decorated cover showing an early map of pre-territory Oregon and Washington. The book includes a large section of archival plates showing early drawings, paintings, floor plans, archaeological remains, fold-out maps and photos of the earliest records of the area. It is extensively bibliographed an indexed. The creation of this book is the culmination of research involving many years and various organizations. Given that the remains of Fort Vancouver more or less disappeared within a handful of years following it's abandonment, this is an important, rare and wonderful book.
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