Research
Found in 878 Collections and/or Records:
Bulletin - National Council of Auxiliaries, 1973-1974
Copies of the AMC Bulletin Auxiliary publication. Publication includes reports from auxialry groups, event photos and recaps, AMC research, people profiles and general strories about AMC related topics.
Bulletin - National Council of Auxiliaries, 1975-1977
Copies of the AMC Bulletin Auxiliary publication. Publication includes reports from auxialry groups, event photos and recaps, AMC research, people profiles and general strories about AMC related topics.
Buming Water, by Laurette Sejourne: notes and copy of selected pages on Cabeza Colossal, 1943-1972
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles on the Americas. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
B.Y.U. Symposium Papers, October 1971: correspondence with, copies of talk summaries, request for paper presentation, etc. BYU Symposium on the Archaeology of Scriptures. 'A Comparison of the Nephite Monetary System with the Egyptian system of Measuring Grain' by Paul Richard Jesclard; 'Ancient Clues to Biblical Puzzles:The Location of Sheba and Ophir' by Zola S. Stallings; 'Perspectives on the Route of Mulek’s Colony' by Ross T and Ruth R. Christensen, 1972
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles about ancient Egypt and surrounding areas. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Cabeza Colossal, Chapter 25 of Rees' manuscript, 1957-1965
Fallis Rees' personal and archaeological correspondence, manuscript, and notes taken by Rees during his research. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
'Calendar Animals and Deities,' by David H. Kelley: notes, correspondence, and copy of Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, Vol. 16. no..3 (Autumn 1960), 1943-1972
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles on the Americas. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Cancer Treatments - AMC, after 1955
This series contains a photo album, photographs, bulletin pages, drawings, lithographs, and contact sheets of the campus and buildings, patients and family, staff and volunteers, auxiliaries and conventions, and activities connected with the Jewish Consumptives' Relief Society and the AMC Cancer Research Center.
Carl Ortwin Sauer: correspondence re: manuscript and Rees' research, 1957-1965
Fallis Rees' personal and archaeological correspondence, manuscript, and notes taken by Rees during his research. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Centaur- Essays on the history of Medical Ideas, by Felix Marti: book notes, 1901-1975
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles on cross-world communications, together with information on American archaeological sites. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.
Chalcatzingo, Morelos, Mexico: A Reprisal of the Olmec Rock Carvings, By David C. Grove: article in American Antiquity, Vol 33. n.4 October, 1968, 1943-1972
Fallis Rees' book notes and articles on the Americas. Fallis F. Rees (1897-1980) was an amateur archaeologist who spent many years studying the ancient civilizations of Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Africa, and the possibility of cross-communication between those civilizations and the cultures developing in the new world.