On the Mode of Communication of Cholera.
London,
John Churchill,
1855
8vo. (225 by 142 mm), two large folding lithographed maps by C. F. Cheffins, the second printed in three colours, letterpress tables, 16pp. publisher's catalogue at end, small crease and tiny clean tear to edge of first folding map, occasional light spotting, light soiling on title, original blind-stamped ripple-grain plum cloth, Edmonds & Remnants binders' ticket, lacking front free endpaper, spine.
14311
notes:
The text contains the substance of all of Snow's articles published since the first edition of 1849, "together with much new matter" (Preface, p. iii), making this essentially a new work.
Within the work Snow provides detailed historical and statistical evidence for his conviction that cholera is a contagious disease that attacks the alimentary canal and is communicated primarily through contaminated water. His examination of the patterns of infection of the Lond...
Within the work Snow provides detailed historical and statistical evidence for his conviction that cholera is a contagious disease that attacks the alimentary canal and is communicated primarily through contaminated water. His examination of the patterns of infection of the Lond...
bibliography:
"John Snow", Dictionary of Scientific Biography, (New York: Scribner, 1970); Diana H. Hook and Jeremy M. Norman, The Haskell F. Norman Library of Science and Medicine, (Jeremy Norman & Company, 1991), 1969; Hans Sallander, Bibliotheca Walleriana: the books illustrating the history of medicine and science collected by Dr. Erik Waller, and bequeathed to the Library of the Royal University of Uppsala; a catalogue (Stockholm, 1955) 9036.
provenance:
Richmond Physical Society, stamp on some leaves including title and verso of maps.