Matching Items (14)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

ContributorsDarío, Rubén (Author)
DescriptionHandwritten letter from Rubén Darío to G. Labocq & Cie, about an economic matter.
ContributorsDarío, Rubén (Author)
Created1908-07-29
DescriptionHandwritten letter from Rubén Darío to Director of Crédit Lyonnais, about an economic matter.
ContributorsDarío, Rubén (Author)
Created1908-07-25
DescriptionHandwritten letter from Rubén Darío to M. Vancopenolle [?], about a payment and remittance of one suit.
ContributorsDarío, Rubén (Author)
Created1908-07-25
DescriptionHandwritten letter from Rubén Darío to Director of Crédit Lyonnais, about an economic matter.
ContributorsDarío, Rubén (Author)
Created1908-07-14
DescriptionHandwritten letter from Rubén Darío to M.M. Mayence & Cie, informing about one meeting with the Spain's King and the location of Nicaraguan legation in Madrid.
ContributorsDarío, Rubén (Author)
Created1908-05-29
DescriptionHandwritten letter from Rubén Darío to Director of Crédit Lyonnais, responding to a previous letter about an economic matter.
ContributorsDarío, Rubén (Author)
Created1908-05-23
DescriptionHandwritten letter from Rubén Darío to the Nicaraguan Consul in London. Rubén Darío was in Madrid when the letter was written.
ContributorsDarío, Rubén (Author)
Created1908-05-23
DescriptionHandwritten letter from Rubén Darío to the Nicaraguan Consul in London. Rubén Darío was in Madrid when the letter was written.
67472-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1958
Description
Paper presented at the annual meetings of the Society for American Archeology, 1958. Discusses assumptions and problems of: techniques for extracting and identifying pollen, pollen distributions and deposition, analysis and statistics. Concludes that pollen study alone is not too reliable a methodology for establishing the types or durations of prior

Paper presented at the annual meetings of the Society for American Archeology, 1958. Discusses assumptions and problems of: techniques for extracting and identifying pollen, pollen distributions and deposition, analysis and statistics. Concludes that pollen study alone is not too reliable a methodology for establishing the types or durations of prior climatic events but it is reliable for reconstructing their geographic distributions and hypotheses of the reasons for climatic change.
67473-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1957
DescriptionPaper presented at the annual meetings of the Society for American Archeology, 1957. Brief discussion of the then-present status of pollen analysis in New World archaeology, the potential archaeological value of an oil flotation technique for extracting pollen from sediment samples, and pollen sampling at archaeological sites.