Transactions of the IsisCB (1.3)

With this issue of the newsletter, we are presenting citations added to the CB during the month of February. All works were published in the last ten years and we have omitted reviews, as is our custom. We’ve broken the citation lists at the bottom of the newsletter into several sections, as you can see from the table of contents on the left. Most important, the articles are listed by journal title for the top six journals we worked on. 

One of the goals of the newsletter is to help users keep up with recent work in their topic areas. The printed Current Bibliography did that using a classification schema based on a broad subject taxonomy subclassified by cultural context and period. This was a top-down approach to bibliography. (You can see this classification scheme here.)

The Explore system, by contrast, uses a bottom-up approach that groups citations according to tags. (See the “Concepts” chart below, which highlights that bottom-up way of organizing using the February entries as the dataset.) Note that the category tags are assigned by the CB staff and contributing editors. We think that this method collects citations into groups that better reflect both the understanding of the topic by participants and conversations taking place in the discipline.

We’ve pulled featured books this time on the topic of collections and museums related to natural history and aquatic environments. Looking through the lists of citations, I also noticed a great many titles about birds. Below this are a couple of articles emphasizing bibliography in relation to biography.

As always, please reach out with any questions, comments, or corrections.  Feel free to use the comment section at the bottom of this issue or send an email to IsisBibliography [at] gmail.com.

—Judy Kaplan, Editor

Most tagged concepts in February. This chart reflects the main concepts indexed in February, highlighting the focus of attention on certain journals during this month.

We are featuring three books from the February batch of citations that historicize collections. Enjoy!

“Biography” was one of the most commonly used concept tags among the entries added to the CB in this period. Here are two titles from this batch that explore the relationship between biography and bibliography.

Citations added in February

Articles

We have sub-grouped titles in the top six journals added to the CB in this period to make the list easier to digest. These can be used to roughly proxy subject and sub-disciplinary interests. Titles from journals other than these six are given towards the end of this section. (Note that some of the citations in these lists go back as far as 2015.)

Bulletin for the History of Chemistry:

Anderson, Robert G. W. “Epitomizing Chemistry for Changing Audiences in Britain, 1820-2020.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 5-14.

Behrman, E. J., D. M. Behrman (ed.), and Manuela Davis (ed.). “Introduction to a translation of “Ueber Nitrohydrochinon” by Karl Elbs.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 80-81.

Behrman, E. J. “Letter to the editor: Jack Sylvester Hine 1923-1988.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 65-65.

Bowden, Mary Ellen and Dee Ann Castel (ed.). “Note: A modern scientific interpretation of Joseph Priestley’s discovery of CO.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 10-17.

Bowden, Mary Ellen. “Lasting Bonds: The American Chemical Society’s History Division and the Center for the History of Chemistry (now Science History Institute).” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 95-99.

Brock, William H. and David E. Lewis (ed.). “A Dark Comedy of Errors and Polemics: Nierenstein, Freudenberg and the Structure of Catechin.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 170-181.

Brock, William H. “The Long and Short of It: The Future Writing of History of Chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 138-145.

Brooks, Nathan M. “The Kazan School of Chemistry: A Re-interpretation.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 92-99.

Burri, Kaspar F. and Richard J. Friary (ed.). “A school for synthesis: R. B. Woodward and the Woodward Research Institute remembered.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 37-50.

Burri, Kaspar F. and Richard J. Friary (ed.). “Liberating R. B. Woodward and the Woodward Research Institute from Error.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 49-57.

Childs, Peter E. “Peter Woulfe (1727-1803): The Last of the Alchemists.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 136-154.

Childs, Peter E. “The History of the Chemicals from Seaweed Industry in Ireland.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 149-163.

Childs, Peter E. “The Iodine Industry in Glasgow and Scotland.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 198-214.

Cole, David Allen. “Can We Bring Chemistry Back? Exploring the Potential of “Gateway Artifacts” at the Science History Institute.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 43-49.

Collins, Sibrina N. “History of Chemistry as a Tool for the Engagement of Underrepresented Students in Chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 107-110.

Cummings, Sarah, Amy Robinson (ed.), Martin D. Saltzman (ed.), et al. “HIST Centennial Memories Paul Raymond Jones (1930-2019).” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 315-269.

Denmark, Scott. “Letter to the editor: More on Jack Baldwin.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 65-66.

Dewald, Howard D. “Development of Chemistry at Ohio University and Its First Women Graduates.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 281-289.

Dewald, Howard D. “Wilbur Morris Stine: Pioneer Scientist.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 182-198.

Dragojlovic, Veljko. “First 60 Years of Melting Point in Organic Chemistry, 1790-1850.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 155-169.

Elbs, Karl, E. J. Behrman, D. M. Behrman, et al. “Primary documents: On Nitrohydroquinone.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 81-83.

Epstein, Jessica . “Freeing the Mole from the Kilogram: How the Redefinition of the Kilogram Shaped Our Definition of the Avogadro Number.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 231-238.

Ferrari, Roberto A. “An Unrecorded Early Lavoisieriana.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 42-50.

Fontani, Marco and Mariagrazia Costa (ed.). “A New Colorful World: Georges Urbain (1872-1938), the Red Star Who Disappeared Off the Horizon.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 60-69.

Freitas-Reis, Ivoni de and Beatriz Gatti de Castro (ed.). “Marguerite Catherine Perey (1909-1975): The Discovery of Francium and the Election of the First Woman to the French Academy of Sciences.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 302-309.

Girolami, Gregory S. and Vera V. Mainz (ed.). “Mendeleev, Meyer, and atomic volumes: An introduction to an English translation of Mendeleev’s 1869 article.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 100-108.

Giunta, Carmen J. “A survey of history of chemistry by chemists.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 18-31.

Giunta, Carmen J. and Martin D. Saltzman (ed.). “History of Chemistry in the Journal of Chemical Education.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 100-108.

Giunta, Carmen J. “Editorial: Promoting Diversity.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 1-2.

Giunta, Carmen J. “Is There Room for the Present in the History of Science?.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 163-170.

Greenberg, Arthur R. “An Old English Pharmacy.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 16-21.

Greenberg, Arthur R. “Mendeleev’s “Problems:” A Means to Engage Students and Teachers in the History of Chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 15-28.

Greenberg, Arthur R. “The Mulhouse Chemistry School, Professor Emilio Noelting and Triphenylcarbinyl Dyes.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 50-59.

Hargittai, István and Magdolna Hargittai (ed.). “On Edward Teller’s Inner World: As Revealed in His Letters to Maria Goeppert Mayer.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 230-235.

Haynie, Sharon L. “Margaret Strickland Collins, Termites and Chemical Defense.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 70-79.

Herschbach, Dudley R. “In Rembrance of I. Berhard Cohen.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 120-122.

Hoffmann, Reinhard W. “Concerning “Molecules with Fluxional Structure: An Initial Moment in Their Conception.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 129-130.

Hoffmann, Reinhard W. “Molecules with Fluxional Structure: An Initial Moment in Their Conception.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 239-243.

Hoffmann, Roald. “Foreword.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 1-2.

Jeffers, Joe. “Caddo Nation Chemistry: Art, Commerce, Pottery, and Tools.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 26-31.

Jensen, William B. “Does History of Chemistry Have a Future?.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 146-152.

Jensen, William B. “The Trouble with Thermodynamics.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 276-280.

Koren, Zvi C. “The Seraph of the Edelstein Center.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 109-117.

Kraft, Alexander. “On the History of Prussian Blue: The Story of Soluble Prussian Blue.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 131-135.

Kristensen, Tor Erik. “Discovery and Structural Elucidation of RDX and HMX, the World’s Most Powerful Industrial Explosives.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 211-229.

Kubbinga, Henk H. “The Fourth Centenary of the Molecular Theory, 1620-2020.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 21-29.

Laszlo, Pierre. “Triply formulated nitrocellulose: Celluloid, viscose and cellophane.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 22-37.

Leigh, G. J. “The Early Lives and Courtship of Jane and Alexander Marcet.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 51-60.

Lewis, David E. “1860-1861: Magic years in the development of the structural theory of organic chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 77-91.

Lewis, David E. “A Future History of Selectivity in Organic Chemistry: Whence, Where, and Whither?.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 62-76.

Lewis, David E. ““The Chemical History of Color,” but Just Two Kinds of Them.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 39-49.

Maeno, Yoshiteru, Yoji Hisamatsu (ed.), and Kazuhiro Egashira (ed.). “Kenji Yoshihara (1929-2022): Shedding Light on the Work of Masataka Ogawa on His Discovery of the Element “Nipponium.” An Obituary-Tribute.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 236-241.

Mainz, Vera V. and Gregory S. Girolami (ed.). “St. Elmo Brady.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 177-177.

Manke, David R. “Fritz Reitzenstein: A Little-Known Figure in the Werner-Jørgensen Controversy.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 179-185.

Martin, Dean F. and Marwa Elkharsity (ed.). “Chemist at war: World War II roles of Jonas Kamlet, consulting chemist.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 134-138.

Martin, Dean F., Vera V. Mainz (ed.), and Gregory S. Girolami (ed.). “St. Elmo Brady (1884-1966). The First African American Chemistry Doctorate Recipient.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 83-107.

Mendeleev, Dmitri Ivanovich, Gregory S. Girolami, and Vera V. Mainz. “Primary documents: On the atomic volume of simple bodies.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 109-115.

Molčanov, Krešimir. “Atomism of Lucretius Seen Through the Eyes of a Modern Physical Chemist.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 6-20.

Morris, Peter John Turnbull and Jeffrey I. Seeman (ed.). “The Importance of Plurality and Mutual Respect in the Practice of the History of Chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 124-137.

Mousavi, Aliyar. “The Compounding of Cinnabar (Red Mercury(II) Sulfide) in the Persian Poetry of the eleventh Century.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 145-148.

Neeley, Kathleen L. and James D. Neeley (ed.). “A Wave of Women Chemists: Mary Elvira Weeks and Her University of Kansas Colleagues.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 108-133.

Netter, Paul. “Jean-Baptiste and Anselme Payen, chemical manufacturers in Grenelle near Paris (1791-1838).” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 1-7.

Nicholas, Christopher P. “Terpene transformations and family relations: Vladimir Ipatieff.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 116-122.

Orna, Mary Virginia and Marco Fontani (ed.). “A Commemoration of Ernest Rutherford on the 150th Anniversary of his Birth, Part I: 1871-1907.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 164-178.

Orna, Mary Virginia and Marco Fontani (ed.). “A Commemoration of Ernest Rutherford on the 150th Anniversary of his Birth, Part II: 1907-1937.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 186-197.

Orna, Mary Virginia. “Archaeological Chemistry: Past, Present, Future.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 29-41.

Orna, Mary Virginia. “Truly, and Necessarily, on the Shoulders of Giants: An Astonishing Historic Journey.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 4-16.

Parascandola, John. “The Development of Medicinal Chemistry as a Disciplines: A Topic Ripe for Historical Exploration.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 77-84.

Patterson, Gary D. “John Mercer (1791-1866): The Most Colorful Chemist in the 19th Century.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 32-38.

Perfetti, Thomas A. “The recipients of the Dexter and Sidney M. Edelstein awards: Biographies of men and women of the history of chemistry, an enjoyable journey through chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 51-61.

Peters, Joop A. and Herman van Bekkum (ed.). “Pioneering Molecular Models for Cycloalkanes by Derx in Böeseken’s Laboratory at Delft, A Century Ago.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 198-204.

Poole-Sawyer, Julianna. “A changing curriculum: Pharmacological texts at the University of Paris in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 1-9.

Rae, Ian D. “HIST Centennial Memories: George Kauffman: A Personal Reminiscence.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 249-250.

Rae, Ian D. “Naming the Proton.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 199-210.

Raos, Nenad. “Oparin’s theory of biogenesis: Biocolloidal or biomolecular?.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 32-36.

Raos, Nenad. “Science and public perception: The Miller experiment.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 43-48.

Rasmussen, Seth C. “Boon or Bane? Color and Transparency in Early Silica Glass.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 17-25.

Rasmussen, Seth C. “Early history of polyaniline—revisited: Russian contributions of Fritzsche and Zinin.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 123-133.

Rasmussen, Seth C. “From Polymer to Macromolecule: Origins and Historic Evolution of Polymer Terminology.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 91-100.

Rasmussen, Seth C. “Mother of Invention: Maria the Jewess and Early Contributions to Chemical Apparatus.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 179-185.

Rasmussen, Seth C. “Moving Beyond the Intersection of Chemistry and History: Evolving Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Historical Study of Chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 85-90.

Rayner-Canham, Marelene and Geoff Rayner-Canham (ed.). “Edith Pechey and Professor Crum Brown: A Key Part of the Edinburgh Seven Saga.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 84-90.

Rayner-Canham, Marelene F. and Geoffrey W. Rayner-Canham (ed.). “Mary “Polly” Porter (1886-1980): Pioneer Woman Crystallographer.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 68-82.

Rayner-Canham, Marelene F. and Geoffrey W. Rayner-Canham (ed.). “Out of Obscurity: Contextualizing Forgotten Women Chemists.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 111-118.

Rayner-Canham, Marelene F. and Geoffrey W. Rayner-Canham (ed.). “Sir William Ramsay: Pioneering Advocate for Woman Chemists.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 296-301.

Reid, Ted W., Douglas S. Gregory (ed.), Richard Epand (ed.), et al. “Irwin B. Wilson (1921-2013): The Story of the First Rational Design of a Drug.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 222-230.

Restrepo, Guillermo. “Computational History of Chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 91-106.

Rigutto, Marcello S. and J. A. Rob van Veen (ed.). “On Sabatier’s Misrepresentation of Berthelot’s Hydrogenation of Benzene with Concentrated Hydroiodic Acid.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 61-67.

Rocke, Alan J. “Reflections on the Last and the Next Hundred Years.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 171-175.

Salvi, Pier Remigio. “Discovering Oxygen: Experimental Techniques and Logic of a Great Chemist, Carl Wilhelm Scheele.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 30-41.

Schlembach, Mary C. and Tina Chrzastowski (ed.). “A Pioneer in Chemical Literature: Librarian Marion E. Sparks.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 215-221.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. and Carmen J. Giunta (ed.). “Preface: Happy Centennial to the ACS Division of the History of Chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 3-4.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “George Bernard Kauffman (1930-2020): A Unique Chemist, Educator, Critic, and Historian. An Obituary-Tribute.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 205-217.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “Remote Interviewing and the History of Chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 153-162.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The back story: Carl Djerassi (1923-2015): The man of multiple lives.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 127-128.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The Back Story: Dudley Herschbach, A Doorway to a New World.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 264-264.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The Back Story: Eugene Garfield (September 16, 1925-February 26, 2017), Information Scientist and Businessma.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 142-144.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The Back Story: Gilbert Stork and the Sweetness of Quinine.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 243-248.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The Back Story: KC, EJ, and Arbie. Three Generations of Eminent Synthetic Organic Chemists.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 126-128.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The back story: Koji Nakanishi (May 11, 1925-March 28, 2019), magician supreme..” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 44 (2019): 152-152.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The back story: Sir Jack Baldwin, FRS.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 64-64.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The Back Story: Steve Weininger, Comfortable in Many Disciplines.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 176-176.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The Back Story: Vladimir Prelog, Albert Eschenmoser and I. A Friend of a Friend is a Friend.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 339-340.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “The Front Story.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 1-3.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. ““The Truth, The Whole Truth, and Nothing but the Truth:” Writing the History of the Woodward-Hoffmann Rules.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 80-94.

Serrie, Gretchen Ihde, James J. Bohning (ed.), and Carmen J. Giunta (ed.). “HIST Centennial Memories: Aaron John Ihde (1909-2000).” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 244-248.

Smith, Patricia J. “ChemSource—A Resource for K-12 Teachers.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 48 (2023): 118-123.

Soares, Liliane Catone and E. J. Behrman (ed.). “Comment and Response – The Toxicity of Mercury.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 2-5.

Soares, Liliane Catone. “From “blue pills” to the Minamata Convention: Mercury, a singular metal.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 67-79.

Streifer, Bill. “Dr. Fritz J. Hansgirg and Heavy Water Production: The Untold Story.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 101-119.

Ŝulĉius, Algirdas, Sergey Teleshov (ed.), and Agnė Šulčiūtė (ed.). “The Prototype of Mobile Laboratories for Chemical Education.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 46 (2021): 186-197.

Ŝulĉius, Algirdas, Sergey Teleshov (ed.), and Tatiana Miryugina (ed.). “Forgotten contribution of V. N. Ipatieff: Production of butadiene from ethanol.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 38-42.

Travis, Anthony S. “Historiography of the Chemical Industry: Technologies and Products versus Corporate History.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 50-61.

Weinert, Charles S. “Die Chemie ist schwierig: Winkler and the discovery of germanium.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 45 (2020): 8-15.

Weininger, Stephen J. ““The Poor Sister:” Coming to Grips with Recent and Contemporary Chemistry.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 119-123.

Wilson, Anne M. “Eda Bachman Walden: What Were Her Contributions.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 290-295.

Zumbulyadis, Nicholas. “HIST Centennial Issue.” Bulletin for the History of Chemistry 47 (2022): 177-178.

Archives of Natural History:

Addyman, Marie E. “William Turner on the dipper, the robin and the redstart (1544).” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 207-210.

Ashby, Jack. “How collections and reputation were built out of Tasmanian violence: Thylacines (Thylacinus cynocephalus) and Aboriginal remains from Morton Allport (1830–1878).” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 2 (2023): 244-264.

Birkhead, Tim R., David L. Clugston, and Errol Fuller. “The dispersal of Vivian Vaughan Davies Hewitt’s collection of great auk (Pinguinus impennis) eggs.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 191-206.

Dickenson, Victoria J. V. “Seeing birds: Dr. Casey Wood’s (1856–1942) second career.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 162-176.

Edgington, John A. “Three botanical watercolours by Richard Bradley (c.1688–1732) including of coffee and cinnamon.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 210-211.

Ghiraldi, Luca, Matteo Ruzzon, Marta Coloberti, et al. “Notes on the birds collected by Giovanni Emilio Cerruti during his journey to New Guinea (1869–1870).” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 149-161.

Herold, Bernardo Jerosch and João Paulo Cabral. “Observations on Portuguese natural history by Leonhard Thurneysser zum Thurn (1531–1596), including the dyes derived from Kermes vermilio and Dracaena draco.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 133-148.

Jefferson, Thomas A. “Marine mammals of the United States Exploring Expedition, 1838–1842: History and taxonomy.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 101-117.

Kitchener, Andrew C. and James G. Sanderson. “When did Alexander Philipp Maximilian, Prinz zu Wied-Neuwied, first describe Felis macroura?.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 211-212.

Kronenberg, Gijs C. “Museum Boltenianum … pars prima continens animalia in spiritu vini adservata … (c.1797, Hamburg): Bibliographic and nomenclatural notes.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 2 (2023): 417-421.

Long, Max. “Nature on the airwaves: Natural history and the BBC in interwar Britain, 1922–1939.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 1-21.

Martinez, Deniz. “The ornithology of Agnes Block (1629–1704): Dutch naturalist, artist, collector and patron.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 2 (2023): 265-276.

Mearns, Richard and Barbara Mearns. “George Montagu (1753–1815): Travels in Scotland and his Scottish bird specimens.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 35-48.

Mierzwa-Szymkowiak, Dominika and Robert Rutkowski. “Benedykt Tadeusz Dybowski and Wiktor Ignacy Godlewski: Ground-breaking studies of Siberian natural history in the nineteenth century.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 2 (2023): 229-243.

Nelson, E. Charles. “New identifications of natural history images on the “Bodleian Plate”, an early eighteenth-century engraved copperplate.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 74-84.

Nelson, E. Charles. “New identifications of natural history images on the “Bodleian Plate”, an early eighteenth-century engraved copperplate.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 2 (2023): 422-422.

Overstreet, Leslie K., Henrietta McBurney, and Roger Gaskell. “A variant issue of Mark Catesby’s Natural history of Carolina (volume 1, issued 1729–1732) given to John Bartram.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 177-190.

Pazienza, Gaetano, Luigi Forte, and Viviana Cavallaro. “Alfonso Palanza (1851–1899): A late nineteenth-century Italian botanist and his herbaria.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 67-73.

Pietsch, Theodore W. and Hans Aili. “Peter Artedi’s “Manuscriptum ichthyologicum”, a source for Albertus Seba’s Locupletissimi rerum naturalium thesauri accurata descriptio (1759).” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 118-132.

Tuttle, Brendan. “Solomon Col Adol (1909–1971), Game Ranger and animal collector in Bor, South Sudan.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 49-66.

Watson, Mark F. ““Bharat Singh’s Stuffed Otter”: Discovery in 1818 of Ailurus fulgens, the Himalayan red panda.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 85-100.

Zworykin, Dmitry D. “Anabas testudineus (Bloch, 1792), climbing perch (Anabantidae), and its discovery in India.” Archives of Natural History 50, no. 1 (2023): 22-34.

Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas:

Ausejo Martínez, Elena and Joaquín Comas Roqueta. “Matemáticas y náutica: Pedro José Rodríguez Riola (1802-1838) en la emergente Armada estadounidense.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 39, no. 83 (2016): 15-43.

Ausejo Martínez, Elena. “Using Euclid in a practical context: Claude Richard’s course on sectors at the Jesuit Imperial College in 17th century Spain.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 45, no. 90 (2022): 35-67.

Berenguer i Clarià, Joaquim. “Los cursos de cálculo diferencial de Rieger en el Colegio Imperial de Madrid.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 44, no. 88 (2021): 15-47.

Dias, Leandro Silva and Gerard Emile Grimberg. “Algebra e Geometria Projectiva Analítica na Inglaterra dos anos 1841-1853.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 38, no. 81 (2015): 11-31.

Díaz, Luis Alfredo Baratas. “El Museo Antropológico del Doctor Velasco (1854-1892). Auge y descomposición de un proyecto museológico-docente.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 39, no. 83 (2016): 45-72.

Espanol Gonzalez, Luis and María Ángeles Martínez García. “La tramitación del título de doctor en ciencias en España por los egresados entre 1931 y 1939.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 38, no. 81 (2015): 33-47.

Garrido, Miguel León. “Aspectos geológicos en la Historia general del Reino de Chile, Flandes indiano (1674) de Diego de Rosales.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 45, no. 91 (2022): 37-58.

Gómez, Rubén Calatrava. “El manuscrito AHPCR V.3/54: una versión inédita en castellano del tratado de alquimia De aluminibus et salibus.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 46, no. 92 (2023): 13-38.

González Bueno, Antonio and José Pedro Marín-Murcia. “Alfredo Baratas Díaz. In memoriam (1963-2022).” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 45, no. 91 (2022): 255-268.

González Domínguez, José. “La Botica del Hospital de la Alhambra y los moriscos.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 45, no. 90 (2022): 15-33.

González, Joaquín Cruz and Francisco Piniella Corbacho. “Los comienzos del oficial radiotelegrafista marítimo en España.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 38, no. 82 (2015): 259-290.

Gudín de la Lama, Enrique. “Emilio Herrera Linares, artífice de la ingeniería aeronáutica española.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 46, no. 92 (2023): 39-68.

López Martín, Sergio José. “Joaquín Montesinos de la Lanza: dos intentos de incluir a navegación a vapor en la Armada española durante el primer tercio del siglo XIX.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 44, no. 88 (2021): 149-174.

Olivares, Joaquín Guerola. “Clavius, Pitiscus y la primera demostración del teorema del coseno para los lados de un triángulo esférico cualquiera.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 45, no. 91 (2022): 15-36.

Olivares, Joaquín Guerola. “El códex Barberinus Latinus 304 y las reflexiones de Baltasar de Torres sobre la enseñanza de las Matemáticas en los primeros años del Collegio Romano.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 44, no. 89 (2021): 13-34.

Pintos Amengual, Gabriel. “La influencia del Museo Matemático de Bilbao (1742) y las “Lecciones náuticas” (1756) de Miguel Archer, en el tránsito del “arte de navegar” a la “navegación astronómica científica” en la formación de los pilotos españoles.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 44, no. 88 (2021): 49-78.

Roldán Casas, José Ángel. “El reconocimiento del mérito científico a través de la historia de algunos de los epónimos estadísticos más relevantes: ¿Se verifica la ley de Stigler?.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 44, no. 89 (2021): 35-60.

Serrano Larráyoz, Fernando. “El boticario y médico Matías de Beinza (1617-1686?) y el éxito de sus remedios secretos.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 39, no. 83 (2016): 189-208.

Soler Ferrán, Pablo. “La aportación de Lluís Bel al desarrollo de la física relativista en España.” Llull: Revista de la Sociedad Española de Historia de las Ciencias y de las Técnicas 38, no. 82 (2015): 345-369.

History of Science in South Asia:

Abbasi, Mubashir and Sarma Sreeramula Rajeshwar. “The Astrolabe by Bulhomal and Pīr Bakhsh of 1841 CE: A Unique Testimonial to an Intercultural Collaboration.” History of Science in South Asia 11 (2023): 210-249.

Angermeier, Vitus. “The Seasons in Ancient Indian Medicine: Long Winters or Extensive Rains?.” History of Science in South Asia 10 (2022): 247-271.

Divino, Federico. “Elements of the Buddhist Medical System.” History of Science in South Asia 11 (2023): 22-62.

Jadhav, Dipak. “Jaina Thoughts on Unity Not Being a Number.” History of Science in South Asia 9 (2021): 209-231.

Jadhav, Dipak. “The Core of the Non-Universe in Jaina Cosmology as a Cube of Eight Space-Points.” History of Science in South Asia 11 (2023): 63-83.

Jayawardana, Chandana. “Geometrical Knowledge in Early Sri Lanka.” History of Science in South Asia 10 (2022): 44-67.

Knudsen, Toke Lindegaard. “Three Purāṇic Statements on the Shape of the Earth.” History of Science in South Asia 9 (2021): 128-166.

Misra, Anuj. “Persian Astronomy in Sanskrit: A Comparative Study of Mullā Farīd’s Zīj-i Shāh Jahānī and its Sanskrit Translation in Nityānanda’s Siddhāntasindhu.” History of Science in South Asia 9 (2021): 30-127.

Misra, Anuj. “Sanskrit Recension of Persian Astronomy: The computation of true declination in Nityānanda’s Sarvasiddhāntarāja.” History of Science in South Asia 10 (2022): 68-168.

Sarma, Sreeramula Rajeswara. “Who is the Native of the Sarvasiddhāntatattvacūḍāmaṇi?.” History of Science in South Asia 9 (2021): 167-208.

Schmidt-Madsen, Jacob. “Gameplay as Foreplay at a Medieval Indian Court: Translation and Discussion of Mānasollāsa 5.16, Phañjikākrīḍā.” History of Science in South Asia 10 (2022): 169-234.

Shylaja, B. S. and Seetharam Javagal. “Mean and True Positions of Planets as Described in Gaṇitagannaḍi : A Karaṇa Text on Siddhāntic Astronomy in Kannaḍa.” History of Science in South Asia 9 (2021): 232-272.

Wikander, Ola. “The Borrowings Kṣuta-/kṣut- (“Inimical”) and Vidumāla- (“Retrograde”) in Sanskrit Astrological Texts, and the Representation of Semiticʿayn in Similar Loans.” History of Science in South Asia 10 (2022): 272-283.

Wujastyk, Dagmar. “Making Gems in Indian Alchemical Literature.” History of Science in South Asia 11 (2023): 1-21.

Wujastyk, Dominik. “The Evidence for Hospitals in Early India.” History of Science in South Asia 10 (2022): 1-43.

Zysk, Kenneth G. “Doṣas by the Numbers: Buddhist Contributions to the Origins of the Tridoṣa-theory in Early Indian Medical Literature with Comparisons to Early Greek Theories of the Humours.” History of Science in South Asia 9 (2021): 1-29.

Zysk, Kenneth G. “Three Versions of Crow Omens.” History of Science in South Asia 10 (2022): 235-246.

Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza

Cozzoli, Daniele. “The visible technician: scientist, technicians, and the neutrality of science in 1960s and 1970s Italy.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 2 (2023): 397-426.

Debailly, Renaud. “Challenging science’s autonomy: the “critique des sciences” in France.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 2 (2023): 313-334.

Doetz, Susanne. “The socialist patient collective, the printing press, and anti-psychiatry in Heidelberg in the 1970s.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 2 (2023): 335-360.

Frigerio, Luca. “Le emozioni e l’alienismo: Giovanni Clerici (1799-1868).” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 1 (2023): 113-140.

Goldstein, Bernard R. and José Chabás. “Continuity and change : the planetary equation tables of John Vimond and Nicolaus Copernicus.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 1 (2023): 61-84.

Higashi, Shin’ichiro. “Grappling with the Ancients: Petrarca and the Problem of Science in On ignorance.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 1 (2023): 27-60.

Ienna, Gerardo and Giulia Rispoli. “Naukovedenie: the social studies of science in the USSR and their international circulation.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 1 (2023): 167-196.

Ienna, Gerardo. “The social and political roots of the institutionalization of the history of physics in Italy.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 2 (2023): 427-460.

Loučová, Petra. “”An attempt to look out of the ecxological depression”: Samizdat and alternative ecological journalism in communist Czechoslovakia, 1969-1989.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 2 (2023): 361-396.

Lusito, Fabio. “The scientia case: scientific censorship and ideological struggles, 1973-1975.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 2 (2023): 461-488.

Omprasad. “From ‘State’ Science to ‘Peoples’ Science: Science Movements in Post-Colonial India (1947-1980).” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 2 (2023): 291-312.

Paparazzo, Emiliano. “Aristotle’s Threefold Conception of Fire in Meteor. I-III.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 1 (2023): 1-26.

Pietrini, Davide. “Il Mechanicorum Liber di Guidobaldo del Monte: esperienze, geometria e rappresentazioni di macchine.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 1 (2023): 85-112.

Podgorny, Irina. “From Quilmes to Gondwana : exploring a Latin American history of science.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 1 (2023): 197-212.

Sanvitale, Ginevra. “”Science gave us nothing”: women and technology in Italian feminism as a radical science movement (1970s-1980s).” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 2 (2023): 489-516.

Zanoni, Elena. “The beginning of the oil industry in Italy: Antonio Stoppani and the contribution offered by geology.” Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza 58, no. 1 (2023): 141-166.

Technology’s Stories:

Akallah, Jethron. “Technologies from Below: Water and Sanitation Supply in Nairobi’s Informal Settlements.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 2 (2020)

Berth, Christiane . “Fear, Curiosity and New Social Rules: Representations of Early Telephone Use in Latin America, 1880-1935.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 2 (2020)

Gordon, Fon L. “Driving “Jim Crow”: Cars and Race in the United States.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 2 (2020)

Heinze, Robert. “Le Gyrobus: an electric bus in colonial Kinshasa.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 2 (2020)

Manuel, Jeffrey T. “Technical Literature and the Text-Searchable: The History of Technology and the Digitized Turn.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 3 (2021)

Montaño, Diana. “Visualizing Imprudentes: Technology and Consumption in Turn-of-the-century Mexico City.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 2 (2020)

Narayanan, Madhu. “An Age-old Craft in a New-age Pandemic.” Technology’s Stories 9, no. 1 (2021)

Newton, Jason L. “The Winter Workscape: Weather and the Meaning of Industrial Capitalism in the Northern Forest, 1850-1950.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 3 (2021)

Pineda, Yovanna. “Ways of Seeing Maintenance and Repair, Argentina.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 2 (2020)

Ritner, Jesse. “Chilling the Industry.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 3 (2021)

Robles, Sonia. “”Good luck and Buenos Notches”: Early Amateur Interactions with Mexican Radio.” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 2 (2020)

Selvan, Thamarai. “Panrutti Kattai: Crafting Taste and Sound.” Technology’s Stories 9, no. 1 (2021)

Vinayan, Soumya and N Lalitha. “Farmlands of Gold.” Technology’s Stories 9, no. 1 (2021)

Wolfe, Mikael. “Cuba’s “Battle of Spare Parts” Against the US Blockade (1961-1964).” Technology’s Stories 8, no. 2 (2020)

Titles in other journals:

Aalbers, Dan. “The Hoffman Report in historical context: A study in denial.” History of the Human Sciences 35, no. 5 (2022): 27-50.

Agosta, Andrea. “Alchimia e cultura magica nella novella del Cinquecento. Bandello, Straparola, il Lasca.” Studi dellaportiani 2 (2023): 299-314.

Alfonso-Goldfarb, Ana Maria and Raíssa Rocha Bombini. “Pestes, pragas e outros bichos: as duas grandes epidemias de Londres (1348 e 1665).” Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science 26 (2020): 8-29.

André, Juliana Genevieve Souza. “O Ato de Pensar X Pensamento no contexto de David Bohm: O Despertar da Criatividade em Oposição à Arbitrariedade e Fragmentação do Conhecimento Científico.” Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science 27 (2021): 25-25.

Araujo, Daniel Alonso de. “A posição da Lógica na classificação das ciências:: um olhar a partir da Metafísica de Avicena.” Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science 30 (2022): 23-37.

Ariztia, Tomas, Aline Bravo, and Ignacio Nuñez. “Baroque tools for climate action. What do we learn from a catalogue of local technologies?.” Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society 6, no. 1 (2023)

Biehler-Gomez, Lucie and Alessandro Porro. “Orthopedics between Milan and Mexico: a case from the late 19th century.” Medicina Historica 7, no. 3 (2023): 1-6.

Bombini, Raíssa Rocha. “Entre poções e amuletos: o uso de pedras preciosas na Peste Bubônica do século XIV.” Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science 28 (2021): 26-26.

Cerulli, Anthony Michael. “Pedagogy, philology, and procedural medical knowledge.” South Asian History and Culture 13, no. 1 (2022): 135-155.

“Corrigendum to ‘The Heliocentric Path of the Moon’.” Journal for the History of Astronomy 53, no. 1 (2022): 128-128.

Cuenca, Alberto López. “Towards a posthumanistic knowledge production. Multimedia artistic research during the rise of neoliberalism in Mexico.” Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society 6, no. 1 (2023)

de Oliveira Andrade, Rodrigo, Ana Maria Alfonso-Goldfarb, and Silvia Waisse. “A física da matéria viva: algumas discussões sobre a teoria da força vital e o mecanicismos físico-químico no século XIX.” Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science 28 (2021): 14-25.

De Risi, Vincenzo. “Euclid’s Fourth Postulate: Its authenticity and significance for the foundations of Greek mathematics.” Science in Context 35, no. 1 (2022): 49-80.

Ducheyne, Steffen. “Using one’s talents in honor of God: Lambert ten Kate (1674-1731) and Isaac Newton’s natural philosophy.” Science in Context 34, no. 1 (2021): 25-50.

Elton, Julia. “The ‘Rocket’ of the lighthouse world: the Fresnel Optic of Hartlepool Heugh Lighthouse and its gas light – a ‘missing link’ in burner development.” International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology 90, no. 2 (2020): 158-198.

Engels, Jens Ivo. “Rhythm Analysis: A Heuristic Tool for Historical Infrastructure Research.” Technology and Culture 63, no. 3 (2022): 830-852.

“Erratum to ‘A Reading Guide for Bruno’s On the Infinite’.” Journal for the History of Astronomy 53, no. 1 (2022): 129-129.

Fackler, Ayça. “When Science Denial Meets Epistemic Understanding.” Science and Education 30, no. 3 (2021): 445-461.

Favero, Giovanni, Michael-W. Serruys, and Miki Sugiura. “A new place for transport in urban network theory: The urban logistic network.” The Journal of Transport History 43, no. 2 (2022): 256-276.

Friedman, Robert Marc. “The 100th Anniversary of Einstein’s Nobel Prize: Facts and Fiction.” Annalen der Physik 534, no. 11 (2022)

Gapaillard, Jacques. “The heliocentric path of the Moon.” Journal for the History of Astronomy 52, no. 4 (2021): 462-490.

García-Deister, Vivette. “Critical contacts: making STS public amid Mexico’s forensic crisis.” Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society 6, no. 1 (2023)

Giraldo, María Elena and Eliana Arancibia Gutiérrez. “Governance in socio-environmental research: an analysis of multi-stakeholder cooperation mechanisms in two research laboratories in Yucatan, Mexico.” Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society 6, no. 1 (2023)

Griesemer, James R. “On lowering guardrails.” Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society 6, no. 1 (2023)

Guenzi, Caterina. “When useful knowledge is not ‘useful knowledge’: astrology at universities in Banaras (c. 1800–2000).” South Asian History and Culture 13, no. 1 (2022): 34-62.

Harahap, Junardi and Rita Destiwati. “”Hijrah Medicine”: a study of the transition of medicine from general to Islamic-based medicine in Indonesia.” Medicina Historica 7, no. 3 (2023): 1-8.

Hessen, Boris Mikhailovich. “Mechanical materialism and modern physics.” Science in Context 34, no. 1 (2021): 155-186.

Hofsommer, Don L. “Husband-and-wife agency on the BM&E.” Railroad History 228 (2023): 86-87.

Hon, Giora and Bernard R. Goldstein. “The Key to Maxwell’s Theory of Electrodynamics (1873): A Productive Methodology.” Annalen der Physik 534, no. 6 (2022)

Innes, Louise. “Tongland works in Galloway and the women engineers.” International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology 90, no. 1 (2020): 1-17.

Iorio, Silvia and Fabiola Zurlini. “Mario Santoro (1905-1998): a pioneer of Italian nipiology.” Medicina Historica 7, no. 3 (2023): 1-8.

Janssen, Michel and Eran Moore Rea. “Einstein–Besso Manuscript on the Perihelion Motion of Mercury Sold for Record Amount.” Annalen der Physik 534, no. 2 (2022)

Junaidi, Budi Agustono, Heristina Dewi, et al. “Nias Island: looking at the life and health of the Ono Niha in the 19th Century.” Medicina Historica 7, no. 3 (2023): 1-9.

Karaboue, Karidia. “History of the first organ transplant: blood transfusions.” Medicina Historica 7, no. 3 (2023): 1-9.

Kobiljski, Aleksandra. “The Global Industrial Now.” Technology and Culture 63, no. 2 (2022): 309-325.

Kochan, Jeff. “Animism and natural teleology from Avicenna to Boyle.” Science in Context 34, no. 1 (2021): 1-23.

Lee, Jung. “Making waste one’s own: transformations in production by resting paper, or hyuji, in Chosŏn Korea.” History and Technology 38, no. 2-3 (2022): 186-204.

Mazliak, Laurent. “Belgium and probability in the nineteenth century: The case of Paul Mansion.” Science in Context 34, no. 3 (2021): 313-340.

Menon, Minakshi. “Indigenous knowledges and colonial sciences in South Asia.” South Asian History and Culture 13, no. 1 (2022): 1-18.

Menon, Minakshi. “What’s in a name? William Jones, ‘philological empiricism’ and botanical knowledge making in eighteenth-century India.” South Asian History and Culture 13, no. 1 (2022): 87-111.

Mills, James. “The transfer and exploitation of German air-to-air rocket and guided missile technology by the Western Allies after World War II.” International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology 90, no. 1 (2020): 75-108.

Montagna, Licia. “Medical Humanities in the Recent Medical Education Literature.” Medicina nei Secoli – Arte e Scienza 35, no. 1 (2023): 9-16.

Mori, Elisabetta. “Olivetti ELEA Sign System: Interfaces Before the Advent of HCI.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 42, no. 4 (2020): 24-38.

Pecchia, Cristina. “Ayurveda, philology and print. On the first printed edition of the Carakasaṃhitā and its context.” South Asian History and Culture 13, no. 1 (2022): 112-134.

Plofker, Kim L. “Adaptation to early modern heliocentrism in technical vocabulary of Sanskrit mathematical astronomy.” South Asian History and Culture 13, no. 1 (2022): 19-33.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “A Co-authorship Network Analysis of National and International Growth in Prehistoric Archaeology, Italy (1875-2000): Combining Bibliometric and Qualitative Data in History of Science Research.” Mélanges de l’École Française de Rome: Italie et Méditerranée 130, no. 2 (2018): 417-430.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “À distances raisonnables des structuralismes : Logique, langage, formalisation et sciences de l’homme. Une dispute du 20e siècle finissant.” Zilsel: Science, technique, société 6 (2019): 70-115.

Plutniak, Sébastien and Camille Noûs. “De l’usage des science studies dans les controverses scientifiques : Une illustration archéologique (suivi de : Georges Laplace, “Autorité et tradition en taxinomie”.” Zilsel: Science, technique, société 7 (2020): 389-413.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “Assyrian merchants meet nuclear physicists: History of the early contributions from social sciences to computer science. The case of automatic pattern detection in graphs (1950s–1970s).” Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 46, no. 4 (2021): 547-568.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “Aux prémices des humanités numériques? La première analyse automatisée d’un réseau économique ancien (Gardin Garelli, 1961). Réalisation, conceptualisation, réception.” ARCS Network Analysis for Social Sciences (2018)

Plutniak, Sébastien . “L’innovation méthodologique, entre bifurcation personnelle et formation des disciplines : Les entrées en archéologie de Georges Laplace et de Jean-Claude Gardin.” Revue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines (2017): 113-139.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “La diffusion numérique de la revue Dialektikê. Cahiers de typologie analytique (1972-1987) : Quinze années de création méthodologique et conceptuelle en archéologie préhistorique.” Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Francaise 116, no. 2 (2019): 365-368.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “Le « Groupe international de recherches typologiques » et le développement de l’archéologie préhistorique.” Préhistoires Méditerranéennes (2019): 7.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “Les vertus des études des sciences : Retour sur une réception française du postmodernisme en archéologie.” Les Nouvelles de l’archéologie (2019)

Plutniak, Sébastien . “Quinze ans de théorie et de méthodologie archéologique francophone : Un retour sur les rapports entre science, politique, et édition, à l’occasion de la diffusion numérique de la revue Dialektikê. Cahiers de typologie analytique (1972-1987.” Les Nouvelles de l’archéologie 155 (2019): 36-41.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “The effects of publishing processes on scientific thought: Typography and typology in prehistoric archaeology (1950s–1990s.” Science in Context 33, no. 3 (2020): 273-297.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “The Professionalisation of Science – Claim and Refusal: Discipline Building and Ideals of Scientific Autonomy in the Growth of Prehistoric Archaeology. The Case of Georges Laplace’s Group of Typologie Analytique, 1950s–1990s.” Organon: International Review 49 (2017): 105-154.

Rai, Saurav Kumar. “Reaching Out: How the Pandemic Impacted Knowledge Production and Dissemination in India.” Technology and Culture 63, no. 2 (2022): 471-476.

Reda, Clementina Gily. “Immagini e volti dello stage, simbolo e topos del mondo che diviene.” Studi dellaportiani 2 (2023): 259-278.

Seeman, Jeffrey I. “History of the Woodward‐Hoffmann Rules. The No‐Mechanism Puzzle**.” The Chemical Record 22, no. 2 (2022)

Sheppard, Deri. “Robert Le Rossignol, 1884–1976: Engineer of the ‘Haber’ Process.” Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science 71, no. 3 (2017): 263-296.

Siegmund-Schultze, Reinhard. “A married couple of mathematicians from Vienna remembers Sigmund Freud (1953).” Science in Context 35, no. 1 (2022): 1-48.

Singh, Charu. “Science in the vernacular? Translation, terminology and lexicography in the Hindi Scientific Glossary (1906).” South Asian History and Culture 13, no. 1 (2022): 63-86.

Staley, Richard A. “Partisans and the Use of Knowledge versus Science.” Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 42, no. 2-3 (2019): 220-234.

Steensen, Anna Kiel, Mikkel Willum Johansen, and Morten Misfeldt. “Textual materiality and abstraction in mathematics.” Science in Context 35, no. 1 (2022): 81-101.

“The Editorial Team.” Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society 6, no. 1 (2023)

Uribe-Mallarino, Consuelo. “Collaborating as peers or targeted by science diplomacy? The participation of Latin American researchers in the European Framework Programme for Research and Innovation.” Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society 5, no. 1 (2022)

Vassallo, Marta and Mario Picozzi. “Managing brain-hype: understanding and discriminating overemphasized brain-based allegations.” Medicina Historica 7, no. 3 (2023): 1-7.

Vitale, Elsa. “Nursing perception and work effectiveness evaluation relating to a novel nursing role in the Italian scenario: the family nurse.” Medicina Historica 7, no. 3 (2023): 1-11.

Webster, Barbara and Richard Cox. “Riding the Early Pacific Railroad: A First Hand Account.” Railroad History , no. 220 (2019): 46-53.

White, John H. “”Mississippi” Revisited.” Railroad History 221 (2019): 84-87.

Yates, JoAnne and Craig N. Murphy. “Introduction: Standards and the Global Economy.” Business History Review 96, no. 1 (2022): 3-15.

Books

Like the articles indexed this period, the book list below also skews toward the history of chemistry. This is a reflection of the workflows that undergird the CB.

Arecco, Davide. Brook Taylor e l’analisi matematica tra XVII e XVIII secolo. Città del Silenzio, 2021. ISBN:8897273823.

Arecco, Davide. Comete, stelle e pianeti. Storia dell’astronomia nell’età di Newton. Città del Silenzio, 2019. ISBN:8897273440.

Arecco, Davide. La corona e il cannocchiale. La scienza inglese e scozzese nel secolo degli Stuart. Città del Silenzio, 2019. ISBN:9788897273486.

Arecco, Davide. La mente nascosta dell’imperatore. Manoscritti storico-religiosi e filosofico-scientifici di Isaac Newton. Città del Silenzio, 2016. ISBN:9788897273271.

Arecco, Davide. Primavera nordica. Il vento del cambiamento scientifico in Scandinavia. Città del Silenzio, 2016. ISBN:9788897273257.

Arecco, Davide. Scienza e libero pensiero. Francia, Austria e stati italiani di Antico Regime. Città del Silenzio, 2016. ISBN:9788897273264.

Ashby, Jack. Platypus Matters: The Extraordinary Story of Australian Mammals. University of Chicago Press, 2022. ISBN:9780226789255.

Bainbridge, David. Paleontology: An illustrated history. Princeton University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780691220925.

Ball, Caroline. A Splendour of Succulents & Cacti. Bodleian Library, 2023. ISBN:9781851245970.

Barnard, A. J., Pierre Geelen, Giel van Hooff, et al. Fabrieksschoorstenen in Nederland (Factory chimneys in the Netherlands). Stichting Fabrieksschoorstenen (STIF), 2017. ISBN:9789082726602.

Barois, Christèle (ed.) and Dagmar Wujastyk (ed.). The Usman Report (1923): Translations of regional submissions. Barkhuis, 2022. ISBN:9789493194472.

Bashford, Alison. The Huxleys: An Intimate History of Evolution. University of Chicago Press, 2022. ISBN:9780226720111.

Beretta, Marco (ed.). A Cultural History of Chemistry in Antiquity. Bloomsbury, 2022. ISBN:9781474294539.

Birkhead, Tim R. Birds and Us: A 12,000-Year History from Cave Art to Conservation. Princeton University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780691239927.

Boeck, Gisela and Alan J. Rocke. Lothar Meyer: Modern Theories and Pathways to Periodicity. Birkhäuser, 2022. ISBN:9783030783419.

Boria, Edoardo. The graphic representation of Political Space. How cartography shapes our world views and why Geopolitics should care about it. OBSERVARE. Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa, 2021. ISBN:9789899002135.

Burnett, Charles (ed.) and Sébastien Moureau (ed.). A Cultural History of Chemistry in the Middle Ages. Bloomsbury, 2022. ISBN:9781474294546.

Cardellicchio, Giusy. L’angelo, il mago, la regina. John Dee: scienza e misticismo nell’età elisabettiana. Città del Silenzio, 2019. ISBN:8897273467.

Cerulli, Anthony Michael. The Practice of Texts Education and Healing in South India. University of California Press, 2022. ISBN:9780520383555.

Chassefière, Éric. Physique de l’environnement Terrestre, Matières Subtiles et Hauteur de L’atmosphère Conceptions de l’atmosphère et Nature de l’air Au Siècle des Lumières. ISTE Editions Ltd., 2022. ISBN:9781784068424.

Coffin, Barbara, Don Luce, Lansing Shepard, et al. A Natural Curiosity: The Story of the Bell Museum. University of Minnesota Press, 2022. ISBN:9781517910365.

Cogliati, Alberto. La geometria non euclidea. Una breve storia dall’antichità a Poincaré. Carocci Editore, 2024. ISBN:9788829022380.

Collins, Sibrina N. (ed.). African American Chemists: Academia, Industry, and Social Entrepreneurship. American Chemical Society, 2022. ISBN:9780841298385.

Conis, Elena. How to Sell a Poison: The Rise, Fall, and Toxic Return of DDT. Bold Type Books, 2022. ISBN:9781645036746.

Cowie, Helen Louise. Victims of Fashion. Cambridge University Press, 2021. ISBN:9781108495172.

Darwin Correspondence Project, Editors (ed.), James A. Secord (ed.), Frederick Burkhardt (ed.), et al. The Correspondence of Charles Darwin: Volume 30, 1882. Cambridge University Press, 2023. ISBN:9781009233576.

Davidson, Nick. The Greywacke: How a Priest, a Soldier and a School Teacher Uncovered 300 Million Years of History. Profile Books, 2021. ISBN:9781788163781.

Delley, Geraldine (ed.), Margarita Díaz-Andreu García (ed.), and Francois Djindjian (ed.). History of Archaeology: International Perspectives: Proceedings of the Xvii Uispp World Congress (1-7 September 2014, Burgos, Spain). Volume 11 / … History of Archaeology Scientific Commission. Archaeopress Archaeology, 2016. ISBN:9781784913977.

Eddy, Matthew Daniel (ed.) and Ursula Klein (ed.). A Cultural History of Chemistry in the Eighteenth Century. Bloomsbury, 2022. ISBN:9781474294652.

Fani, Sara. Prendi, aggiungi, mescola e scrivi. Ricettari arabi sulla preparazione di inchiostri. Editrice Bibliografica, 2024. ISBN:9788893575706.

Fara, Patricia. A Lab of One’s Own: Science and Suffrage in the First World War. Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN:9780198794981.

Farmer, Jared. Elderflora: A Modern History of Ancient Trees. Basic Books, 2022. ISBN:9780465097845.

Finnegan, Diarmid A. The Voice of Science: British Scientists on the Lecture Circuit in Gilded Age America. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2021. ISBN:9780822946816.

Flight, Tim. Basilisks and Beowulf: Monsters in the Anglo-Saxon World. Reaktion Books, 2021. ISBN:9781789144338.

Fraser, Benjamin (ed.) and Steven D. Spalding (ed.). Transnational Railway Cultures: Trains in Music, Literature, Film, and Visual Art. Berghahn Books, 2021. ISBN:9781789209181.

Giunta, Carmen J. (ed.), Vera V. Mainz (ed.), and Gregory S. Girolami (ed.). 150 Years of the Periodic Table: A Commemorative Symposium. Springer Nature, 2021. ISBN:9783030679101.

Gordin, Michael D. On the Fringe: Where Science Meets Pseudoscience. Oxford University Press, 2021. ISBN:9780197555767.

Goss, Andrew M. (ed.). The Routledge Handbook of Science and Empire. Routledge, 2021. ISBN:9780367221256.

Gullotto, Davide. La Repubblica dei Matematici. Storia dell’analisi matematica nell’età di Euler e Leibniz. Città del Silenzio, 2023. ISBN:8897273882.

Hargittai, István and Magdolna Hargittai. Science in London: A Guide to Memorials. Springer International Publishing, 2021. ISBN:9783030623326.

Hargittai, Magdolna. Meeting the Challenge: Top Women in Science. Oxford University Press, 2023. ISBN:9780197574751.

Heilbron, John L. The Incomparable Monsignor: Francesco Bianchini’s World of Science, History and Court. Oxford University Press, 2024. ISBN:978-0192856654.

Hersey, Mark D. (ed.) and Theodore L. Steinberg (ed.). A Field on Fire: The Future of Environmental History. The University of Alabama Press, 2019. ISBN:9780817320010.

Hilaire-Pérez, Liliane (ed.), Delphine Spicq (ed.), Koen Vermeir (ed.), et al. Le livre technique avant le XXe siècle: à l’échelle du monde; (Technical books before the 1900s: On a global scale). CNRS Éditions, 2017. ISBN:9782271086556.

Hoffmann, Reinhard W. Classical Methods in Structure Elucidation of Natural Products. John Wiley & Sons, 2018. ISBN:9783906390734.

Houston, David. Southern Pacific 1930s to 1950s: Los Angeles to Bakersfield – The story behind the pictures. Four Ways West Publications, 2021. ISBN:9781733792936.

Jack, Robert Smail (ed.) and Fritz Scholz (ed.). Wilhelm Ostwald: The Autobiography. Springer, 2017. ISBN:9783319469539.

Jackson, Catherine M. Molecular World: Making Modern Chemistry. The MIT Press, 2023. ISBN:9780262545549.

Kennedy, Victor S. Shifting Baselines in the Chesapeake Bay: An Environmental History. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2018. ISBN:9781421426549.

Kinch, Michael Paul. Between Hope and Fear: A History of Vaccines and Human Immunity. Pegasus Books, 2018. ISBN:9781681777511.

Kisling, Vernon N. Zoo and Aquarium History: Ancient Animal Collections to Conservation Centers. CRC Press, 2022. ISBN:9781000585384.

Klein, Ursula. Technoscience in History: Prussia, 1750–1850. MIT Press, 2020. ISBN:9780262539296.

Kragh, Helge S. From Transuranic to Superheavy Elements: A Story of Dispute and Creation. Springer, 2018. ISBN:9783319758121.

Latour, Bruno. Down to Earth: Politics in the New Climatic Regime. Polity Press, 2018. ISBN:9781509530571.

Lawrence, Sandra. Miss Willmott’s Ghosts. Blink Publishing, 2022. ISBN:9781786581310.

Linnard, Gareth (ed.) and Branden Holmes (ed.). Thylacine: The History, Ecology and Loss of the Tasmanian Tiger. CSIRO Publishing, 2023. ISBN:9781486315543.

Lo Basso, Luca. Dal vento al carbone. Le metamorfosi del lavoro marittimo in Italia nell’età della transizione (1880-1920). Città del Silenzio, 2020. ISBN:8897273599.

Lykknes, Annette (ed.) and Brigitte van Tiggelen (ed.). Women In Their Element: Selected Women’s Contributions To The Periodic System. World Scientific, 2019. ISBN:9789811206306.

Mainz, Vera V. (ed.) and E. Thomas Strom (ed.). The posthumous Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Volume 2, Ladies in waiting for the Nobel Prize. American Chemical Society, 2018. ISBN:9780841233904.

McCracken, Donal P. Napoleon’s Garden Island: Lost and Old Gardens of St Helena, South Atlantic Ocean. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, 2022. ISBN:9781842467480.

McHugh, James. An Unholy Brew: Alcohol in Indian History and Religions. Oxford University Press, 2021. ISBN:9780199375943.

McIntyre, Lee C. How to Talk to a Science Denier: Conversations with Flat Earthers, Climate Deniers, and Others Who Defy Reason. MIT Press, 2021. ISBN:9780262046107.

Menzies, Nicholas K. Ordering the Myriad Things: From Traditional Knowledge to Scientific Botany in China. University of Washington Press, 2021. ISBN:9780295749457.

Michel, Ellinor and Mark P. Witton. Art and Science of the Crystal Palace Dinosaurs. The Crowood Press, 2022. ISBN:978-0719840494.

Moran, Bruce T. (ed.). A Cultural History of Chemistry in the Early Modern Age. Bloomsbury, 2022. ISBN:9781474294591.

Morris, Peter John Turnbull (ed.). A Cultural History of Chemistry in the Modern Age. Bloomsbury, 2022. ISBN:9781474294812.

Moss, Stephen. Ten Birds That Changed the World. Basic Books, 2023. ISBN:9781541604469.

Mostowska, Agnieszka (ed.), Adam Rostański (ed.), and Anna Mikuła (ed.). Polskie Towarzystwo Botaniczne: W setną rocznicę powstania: 1922-2022 [Centenary of the Polish Botanical Society (1922–2022)]. Polskie Towarzystwo Botaniczne, 2022. ISBN:9788396350312.

Murphy, Sherra. “The First National Museum”: Dublin’s Natural History Museum in the Mid-nineteenth Century. Cork University Press, 2021. ISBN:9781782054559.

Nelson, E. Charles (ed.), Emer Lawlor (ed.), and Elizabethanne Boran (ed.). Botany and Gardens in Early Modern Ireland. Four Courts Press, 2023. ISBN:9781801510233.

Nixon, Sean. Passions for Birds: Science, Sentiment, and Sport. McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2022. ISBN:9780228010456.

Orna, Mary Virginia. March of the Pigments: Color History, Science and Impact. Royal Society of Chemistry, 2022. ISBN:9781839163159.

Parker, Eleanor. Winters in the World: A Journey through the Anglo-Saxon Year. Reaktion Books, 2022. ISBN:9781789146721.

Patterson, Gary D. Chemistry in 17th-Century New England. Springer, 2020. ISBN:9783030432607.

Piazzesi, Benedetta. Del governo degli animali. Allevamento e biopolitica. Quodlibet, 2023. ISBN:9788822921369.

Ramberg, Peter J. (ed.). A Cultural History of Chemistry in the Nineteenth Century. Bloomsbury, 2022. ISBN:9781474294805.

Rizzi, Martino. Aeronauti nei cieli di Venezia. Uomini e macchine volanti 1784-1911. Cierre edizioni, 2024. ISBN:9788855202336.

Roberts, Brynley F. Edward Lhwyd: c.1660-1709, Naturalist, Antiquary, Philologist. University of Wales Press, 2022. ISBN:9781786837844.

Roelli, Philipp. Latin as the language of science and learning. de Gruyter, 2021. ISBN:9783110745757.

Rothfels, Nigel T. Elephant Trails: A History of Animals and Cultures. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2021. ISBN:9781421442594.

Salvador, Andreia. Interesting Shells. Natural History Museum (London, England), 2022. ISBN:9780565095109.

Sankaran, Neeraja. A Tale of Two Viruses: Parallels in the Research Trajectories of Tumor and Bacterial Viruses. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2021. ISBN:9780822946304.

Scerri, Eric R. (ed.) and Elena Ghibaudi (ed.). What Is A Chemical Element? A Collection of Essays by Chemists, Philosophers, Historians, and Educators. Oxford University Press, 2020. ISBN:9780190933784.

Schlaudt, Oliver (ed.) and Lara Huber (ed.). Standardization in Measurement: Philosophical, Historical and Sociological Issues. Pickering & Chatto, 2015. ISBN:9781781448021.

Schlossman, Marc. Extinction: Our Fragile Relationship with Life on Earth. Ammonite Press, 2022. ISBN:9781781454534.

Schummer, Joachim and Tom Børsen (ed.). Ethics of Chemistry: From Poison Gas to Climate Engineering. World Scientific Publishing Company, 2021. ISBN:9789811233531.

Schwartz, Joel S. Robert Brown and Mungo Park: Travels and Explorations in Natural History for the Royal Society. Springer Nature, 2021. ISBN:9783030748593.

Strom, E. Thomas (ed.) and Vera V. Mainz (ed.). Pioneers of Magnetic Resonance. American Chemical Society, 2021. ISBN:9780841237100.

Strom, E. Thomas (ed.) and Vera V. Mainz (ed.). The posthumous Nobel Prize in chemistry. Volume 1, Correcting the errors and oversights of the Nobel Prize Committee. American Chemical Society, 2017. ISBN:9780841232501.

Tambolo, Luca. Il mondo su misura. Introduzione al negazionismo scientifico. Codice Edizioni, 2024. ISBN:9791254500996.

Thackray, Arnold, Jeffrey L. Sturchio (ed.), and Bruce V. Lewenstein (ed.). Science: Has its Present Past a Future?: Selected Essays. Independently published, 2022. ISBN:9798551167730.

Toles, Tom and Michael E. Mann. The madhouse effect: how climate change denial is threatening our planet, destroying our politics, and driving us crazy. Columbia University Press, 2016. ISBN:9780231177863.

Toschi, Caterina. L’idioma Olivetti 1952–1979. Quodlibet, 2018. ISBN:9788822901972.

van de Roemer, Bert (ed.), Florence F. J. M. Pieters (ed.), Hans Mulder (ed.), et al. Maria Sibylla Merian. Lannoo Publishers, 2022. ISBN:9789401485333.

Wothers, Peter. Antimony, Gold, and Jupiter’s Wolf: How The Elements were Named. Oxford University Press, 2020. ISBN:9780199652723.

Chapters

Belton, Olivia and Kate Devlin. “The Measure of a Woman: Fembots, Fact and Fiction Get.” In AI Narratives: A History of Imaginative Thinking about Intelligent Machines, edited by Stephen Cave (2020), 357-381.

March-Russell, Paul. “Machines Like Us? Modernism and the Question of the Robot.” In AI Narratives: A History of Imaginative Thinking about Intelligent Machines, edited by Stephen Cave (2020), 165-186.

Meyer, Jan-Henrik and Arne Kaijser. “Nuclear Installations at European Borders: Transboundary Collaboration and Conflict.” In Engaging the Atom: The History of Nuclear Energy and Society in Europe from the 1950s to the Present, edited by Kaijser, Arne (2021)

Plutniak, Sébastien and Massimo Tarantini. “An Influential Outsider. Georges Laplace between French institutions and Italian prehistory.” In History of Archaeology: International Perspectives: Proceedings of the Xvii Uispp World Congress (1-7 September 2014, Burgos, Spain). Volume 11 / … History of Archaeology Scientific Commission, edited by Delley, Geraldine (2016), 79-89.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “Interests on the margins of the disciplines: Computing, engineers and archaeologists in France (1950–2000).” In History of Archaeology: International Perspectives: Proceedings of the Xvii Uispp World Congress (1-7 September 2014, Burgos, Spain). Volume 11 / … History of Archaeology Scientific Commission, edited by Delley, Geraldine (2016), 221-232.

Plutniak, Sébastien . “Refrain from standards? French, Cavemen and Computers: A (short) story of Multidimensional Analysis in French Prehistoric Archaeology.” In Standardization in Measurement: Philosophical, Historical and Sociological Issues, edited by Schlaudt, Oliver (2015), 39-52.

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