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| 02861nam 2200373za 4500 |
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001 | 9.838759 |
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003 | CaOODSP |
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005 | 20221107151443 |
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007 | cr ||||||||||| |
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008 | 170622s1979 onca|||#o f000 0 eng d |
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020 | |qpaper : |z0-660-10415-6 |
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040 | |aCaOODSP|beng |
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043 | |an-cn-ns |
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086 | 1 |aR64-81/1979-29E-PDF|zR64-81/1979-29 |
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100 | 1 |aMcNally, Paul. |
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245 | 10|aFrench table glass from the fortress of Louisbourg, Nova Scotia |h[electronic resource] / |cPaul McNally. Eighteenth-century French blue-green bottles from the fortress of Louisbourg, Nova Scotia / Jane E. Harris. |
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246 | 15|aEighteenth-century French blue-green bottles from the fortress of Louisbourg, Nova Scotia |
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260 | |aOttawa : |bNational Historic Parks and Sites Branch, Parks Canada, Environment Canada, |cc1979. |
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300 | |a152 p. : |bill. |
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490 | 1 |aHistory and archaeology ;|v29 |
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500 | |aHistorical publication digitized 2017 from print. |
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500 | |aIssued also in French under title: Le verre de table français de la forteresse de Louisbourg, Nouvelle-Écosse. |
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504 | |aIncludes bibliographic references. |
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520 | 3 |aThe first monograph in the collection describes how "A survey of table glass at Louisbourg reveals that the French used table wares made of at least five different metals (in addition to such English pieces as might have been owned by French inhabitants). The five classes of metal found were: common green or verre fougère metal; common clear or cristallin glass; a crizzléd metal; a clear potash-lime or Bohemian-style metal, and a clear metal with significant lead content - demi-lead crystal"--Abstract, p. 4. The second monograph details the glassware and states that "A large portion of the glassware excavated at the Fortress of Louisbourg consists of blue-green bottles of 18th-century French origin. Distinctions in bottle terminology occurred consistently in the Louisbourg inventories of the period andwere applied to the blue-green glass containers in the Louisbourg archaeological collection, resulting in the establishment of a typology consisting of four bottle forms: fioles, flacons, bouteilles and dames-jeannes" --Abstract, p. 84. |
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692 | 07|2gccst|aGlass |
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692 | 07|2gccst|aArchaeological investigations |
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692 | 07|2gccst|aHistoric sites |
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700 | 1 |aHarris, Jane E. |
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710 | 1 |aCanada. |bParks Canada. |bNational Historic Parks and Sites Branch. |
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740 | 02|aEighteenth-century French blue-green bottles from the fortress of Louisbourg, Nova Scotia |
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775 | 08|tLa verre de table français de la forteresse de Louisbourg, Nouvelle-Écosse |w(CaOODSP)9.838764 |
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830 | #0|aHistory and archaeology ;|v29|w(CaOODSP)9.837982 |
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856 | 40|qPDF|s42.32 MB|uhttps://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2017/pc/R64-81-1979-29-eng.pdf |
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