Though scholars have never seen most of the material, they were made tantalizingly aware of its existence by Burroughs himself, who published a descriptive catalog of the archive in 1973.
But while the organization of the material and brief descriptions of the contents have been known since the publication of the descriptive catalog in 1973, scholars could find new relevance in Burroughs's choices.
In 1893, Burbank published a descriptive catalog of some of his best varieties, entitled New Creations in Fruits and Flowers.
A descriptive catalog of the Trinity Evangelical Divinity School Biblical coin collection.
He extensively rearranged that library, and created a catalog in two parts; an alphabetical descriptive catalog of the items in the library, and an alphabetical Index of Subjects.
Hildebrand, S.F., 1946 (26 Feb.) A descriptive catalog of the shore fishes of Peru.
Mr. Pratt worked with his staff to compile an updated, more descriptive catalog of land that falls under his department's responsibility.
He built an important collection of more than 700 specimens of the anatomy of the mastoid region, with a descriptive catalog, that he donated to the Royal College of Surgeons Museum in 1911 but continued to expand and update.
What is the difference between a literary work and a descriptive catalog, and how is it that we don't feel the heavy hand of an author's direction the way we feel Scarry's laborious renderings of novelistic passages?
Marburger Repertorium of German manuscripts in the 13th and 14th century, Philipps-Universität Marburg (descriptive catalog) (not included are solitary documents and minimal inscriptions in Latin Manuscripts).