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  1. Colonial pride and metropolitan expectations: the British Museum and Melbourne's meteorites.A. M. Lucas, P. J. Lucas, T. A. Darragh & S. Maroske - 1994 - British Journal for the History of Science 27 (1):65-87.
    The four-year wrangle over the ownership of what was then thought to have been the largest known meteorite, recognized near Melbourne in 1860, provides a fine-grained example of the interaction between scientific internationalism, metropolitan appetite for specimens, and colonial civic pride.
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  • British women who contributed to research in the geological sciences in the nineteenth century.Mary R. S. Creese & Thomas M. Creese - 1994 - British Journal for the History of Science 27 (1):23-54.
    A count of articles by women listed in theCatalogue of Scientific Papers, 1800–1900, the nineteen-volume international index brought out by the Royal Society, produced a collection of almost 4000 titles of papers by about 1000 nineteenth-century women authors. Out of 181 geology papers in this collection, 118 (65 per cent) were by British women (see Table 1, columns 1 and 2). This finding is especially remarkable when considered against the more general background of nineteenth-century women's work in science (at least (...)
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