Papp Gábor: A magyar topografikus és leíró ásványtan története (Topographia Mineralogica Hungariae 7. Miskolc, 2002)
VI. ÚJ SZINTÉZISEK FELÉ? (az 1980-as évek közepe óta eltelt időszak)
Fig. 15. Vulcanus hammers basalt columns on his anvil. (Fichtel: Mineralogische Bemerkungen aus dem Karpathen, 1791). Fig. 16. Wooden crystal models (Department of Mineralogy, Eötvös Loránd University), the two on the right were bought from Karl Prüfer in 1835, while the third one was bought from Anton Fauser in 1857. Fig. 17. A passage from the paper "Description of the minerals to be found in the Buda Mountains" by Szaniszló Töltényi. (Tudományos Gyűjtemény, 1820, Number VI). Fig. 18. The teaching of mineralogy in educational institutions coming under the ruling of (a) Ratio Educationis I and (b) II. The vertical axis represents the pupil's age, expressed in years. Shaded areas represent periods of mineralogical education, with the number of mineralogy classes per week. Within the columns: A: academy, B: faculty of arts, H: faculty of theology, J: faculty of law, L: "lyceum", N: together with botany, 0: faculty of medicine. Fig. 19. Label from the Count Brunswick collection. Fig. 20. Pál Kitaibel 's certificate of membership of the Mineralogical Society of Jena. Fig. 21. The Belházy House in Selmecbánya*, a place for the education of chemistry at the Academy of Mining from 1770. Fig. 22. Front cover of the one-issue mineralogical magazine of Jonas (1820, detail). Fig. 23. Route of Ignaz von Born in 1770. Fig. 24. Section through the Simon Judae copper mine at Dognácska* from Born' s Briefe (illA). Fig. 25. The area (striped) discussed in the first volume of Fichtel' s Mineralogische Bemerkungen von den Karpathen (1791). Fig. 26. Map of Kitaibel's research trips (1792-1815) based on the data of Jávorka (1957) and Harmattá (1962). Fig. 27. Route of Robert Townson in 1793. Fig. 28a. Route of Jens Esmark in 1794. (1: Oravica*, 2: Szászka*, 3: Ujmoldova*, 4: Dognácska*, 5: Szászváros*, 6: Szászsebes*, 7: Oltfelsősebes*, 8: Felsőbánya*, 9: Nagybánya*, 10: Telkibánya, 11: Abaújszántó, 12: Szomolnok*, 13: Gölnic*, 14: Igló*, 15: Dobsina*, 16: Alsósajó*). Fig. 28b. Esmark' s route in the Transylvanian Ore Mountains. Fig. 29. Realgar from Kapnikbánya*. (R.-J. Haüy, 1809). Fig. 30a-d. Route of François-Sulpice Beudant in 1818. (1: Sárisáp, 2: Visegrád, 3: Vörösvágás*, 4: Gálszécs*, 5: Velejte*, 6: Veszprém, 7: Zalabér, 8: Zalaegerszeg, 9: Körmend, 10: Rohonc*, 11: Kőszeg, 12 Sopron, 13: Brennberg). Fig. 31. "Experiments with pilsum" - part of Pál Kitaibel's manuscript containing the results of his experiments on the "molybdic silver" [pilsenite] from Nagybörzsöny. Fig. 32. Calcite crystal group from Scopoli's Crystallographia Hungarica (1776). Fig. 33. Kirnik* Hill at Verespatak*, from Fridvaldszky' s Minerologia Magni Principatus Transilvaniae (1767). Fig. 34. Salt mine at Torda*, from Fridvaldszky's Minerologia Magni Principatus Transilvaniae (1767). Fig. 35. Calcite pseudomorph after aragonite (Aranyosbánya*, specimen from the 1770s).