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  1.  13
    Showing and hiding: The flickering visibility of earth workers in the archives of earth science.Lydia Barnett - 2020 - History of Science 58 (3):245-274.
    This essay interrogates the motives of eighteenth-century European naturalists to alternately show and hide their laboring-class fossil suppliers. Focusing on rare moments of heightened visibility, I ask why gentlemen naturalists occasionally, deliberately, and even performatively made visible the marginalized science workers on whom they crucially depended but more typically ignored or effaced. Comparing archival fragments from elite works of natural history across a considerable stretch of time and space, including Italy, France, Switzerland, Britain, Ireland, Germany, Spain, and French, Spanish, and (...)
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  2.  9
    Deborah R. Coen. Climate in Motion: Science, Empire, and the Problem of Scale. xiv + 425 pp., illus., notes, bibl., index. Chicago/London: University of Chicago Press, 2018. $40 (cloth). E-book and paperback available. [REVIEW]Lydia Barnett - 2020 - Isis 111 (3):674-675.
  3.  10
    Raphaël Rabusseau. Les neiges labiles: Une histoire culturelle de l'avalanche au XVIIIe siècle. xvi + 176 pp. Geneva: Presses d'Histoire Suisse, 2007. $60. [REVIEW]Lydia Barnett - 2009 - Isis 100 (1):165-166.
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    William Poole. The World Makers: Scientists of the Restoration and the Search for the Origins of the Earth. x + 234 pp., illus., bibl., index. Oxford: Peter Lang Publishing, 2010. $51.95. [REVIEW]Lydia Barnett - 2011 - Isis 102 (2):359-360.
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