Photocopy materials (from books and journals), 1868-1974
Scope and Contents
Photocopy Materials include:
-A History of Chemistry by F.J. Moore, Professor of Organic Chemistry, M.I.T. : Chapter V, The Later Phlogistians-The Discovery of Oxygen (North Carolina, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1918, PP. 33-59)
-Copy of pages from The British Medical Journal (August 1, 1868, PP. 114-115; May 30, 1868, p. 548; October 16, 1869, PP. 412-413)
-On the Urari: The deadly arrow-poison of the Macusis, an Indian Tribe in British Guiana, by Richard Schomburgk (Adelaide: E. Spiller, Acting Government Printer, North-Terrace, 1879, PP. 2-18)
-The influence of partial pressure of nitrous oxide on the depth of anesthesia and the electro-encephalogram in man, by Albert Faulconer, John W. Pender and Reginald G. Bickford (from Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., Sept. 1949, PP. 601-609)
-History of Chemistry: Chapter VI, Lavoisier (pp. 47-59, undated)
-One Hundred Years of Indiana Medicine, 1849-1949 (published in connection with the centennial of the Indiana State Medical Association, 1949, pp. 92, 100, 138)
-The Study of Cyclopropane, by Dr. William Neff (Anesthesiology, Sept. 1974)
-Harding of Iowa, by David Davis and Jack Moyers (Clinical Anesthesia, Chapter 6, pp. 68-76, undated)
Dates
- Other: 1868-1974
Language of Materials
Collection materials are in English
Conditions Governing Access
Collection is open for research. The UCSF Archives and Special Collections policy places access restrictions on material with privacy issues for a specific time period from the date of creation. Restrictions are noted at the series and/ or folder level. This collection will be reviewed for sensitive content upon request. Contact the UCSF Archivist for information on access to restricted files.
Extent
From the Collection: 107.5 Linear Feet (22 cartons, 4 boxes, 14 over-sized boxes, 8 over-sized items)
Repository Details
Part of the UCSF Archives and Special Collections Repository
UCSF Kalmanovitz Library
530 Parnassus Avenue
San Francisco CA 94143-0840 USA
https://www.library.ucsf.edu/archives/ask-an-archivist/