The Mineral Kingdom
With Colored Illustrations of the Most Important Minerals, Rocks, and Petrifications
- 1859
Rights
Download all 158 images
PDFZIPof full-sized JPGsDownload selected image
Small JPG1200 x 1673px — 459 KBLarge JPG2880 x 4015px — 2.5 MBFull-sized JPG6448 x 8990px — 9.9 MBOriginal fileTIFF — 6448 x 8990px — 166 MBJohann Gottlob von Kurr (1798-1870) published Das Mineralreich in Bildern as a professor of mineralogy and botany at the Stuttgart Polytechnic Institute in 1858. Digitized in entirety, this first edition English translation of the German Das Mineralreich in Bildern consists of two sections. The first is an introduction including topics such as the formation of crystals and chemical reactions of crystals. Of particular note is a five-page table of the chemical elements (pp. 7-11), consisting of two parts: I. Metalloids, nonmetallic elements; and II. Metals. The second section is devoted to the description of various mineral groups including precious stones, hornblende and augitic minerals, felspathic minerals, micaceous minerals, zeolitic minerals, calcareous minerals, and various salts and compounds. The final pages of the book contain twenty-four lithograph plates depicting crystalline structures and mineral forms. The plates are hand-colored, using metallic finishes to create a lustrous effect.
| Property | Value |
|---|---|
| Author | |
| Publisher | |
| Editor | |
| Place of publication | |
| Format | |
| Genre | |
| Extent |
|
| Language | |
| Subject | |
| Rights | Public Domain Mark 1.0 |
| Credit line |
|
Institutional location
| Department | |
|---|---|
| Collection | |
| Physical container |
|
Related Items
Cite as
Kurr, J. G. (Johann Gottlob). The Mineral Kingdom. Edinburgh, Scotland: Edmonston and Douglas, 1859. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/pr76f4633.
This citation is automatically generated and may contain errors.
Rights
Download all 158 images
Searchable PDFmay contain errorsZIPof full-sized JPGsDownload selected image
-
Keyboard Shortcuts
Previous image shift + or , Next image shift + or . Pan image Zoom in + or shift + Zoom out - or shift + Zoom to fit 0 Close viewer esc Also
Mouse click to zoom in; shift-click to zoom out. Drag to pan. Pinch to zoom on touch.