Notebooks
Found in 458 Collections and/or Records:
Vasco M. Tanner collection on the South American Expedition
Contains first-hand accounts and retrospective articles on the South American Expedition. Includes diaries, correspondence, field notes, and articles. Much of the material focuses on the contributions of Benjamin Cluff Jr. and Chester G. Van Buren. Collection was compiled by Vasco M. Tanner, and includes his own research and writing on the expedition.
The prospector, 1905 February 17
Thomas L. Kane notebook, 1839
Contains notes and quotations written by Kane on a variety of topics. Volume dates from 1839.
Thomas L. Kane notebook, 1847-1885
Contains business notes, notes from meetings, and descriptions of coat-of-arms dating from 1847-1885.
Thomas L. Kane's notebook while in Mexico, 31 July 1873-December 1876
Material contain sketches, notes on Spanish vocabulary and pronunciation, financial records, and notes from interviews with Mexicans about the land, people, government and religion. Kane writes about Don Quixote, the shooting of Apparicio Cardenas, and writes a Catholic prayer called "Bendito"; he also talks about putting railroad lines in Mexico and a landgrant. Topics of Mexican history and politics are throughout. Dated from 1873 to 1876.
Thomas Taylor report on iron and coal quality in Iron County, approximately 1900
Report, written apparently in the hand of Thomas Taylor and signed by him, describing the iron and coal quality in Iron County, no date.
K. H. and James M. Thorne slides, photographs, and other material
Contains slides and photographs by Thorne documenting her work as a plant curator and botanist at Brigham Young University. Includes images of plants in Utah and the West, and of the Bean Museum, as well as from field trips to Los Alamos, New Mexico, Costa Rica, Kauai, and other unidentified locations. Materials dated approximately 1965-1993.
Tintic Delmar Mining Company, 1910 December 7
Traducciones del ritual maya, 1934
Contains four notebooks containing English translations of unidentified Maya rituals, with a note attributing the translation to Pedro P. Castillo. Contains also two loose pages of an English translation of Maya rituals, and eight pages of unidentified Maya-language typescript, including grammar notes.