3 books also known as codices.
Terry Rempel Mroz has written: 'McLennan Library random stack survey' -- subject(s): Books, Conservation and restoration, Deterioration, Library surveys, McLennan Library, Paper, Preservation
Questions on paper
Leonard S. Marrington has written: 'Mathematical experience through paper folding'
Ron Lister has written: 'Drawing with pastels' -- subject(s): Pastel drawing 'Designing greeting cards and paper products' -- subject(s): Commercial art, Greeting cards, Paper products
Maclin S. Hall has written: 'Commercialization of on-machine sensors to measure paper mechanical properties'
No. Mayans did not have books. (They had writing, but it was carved in stone, not written on paper.)If Mayans did have books, the Spaniards likely would have burned them for containing blasphemies.
Paper
The Maya civilization used hieroglyphic writing, which were usually written or scribed by scribes on materials such as bark paper, cloth, or stone. These texts were not bound into books in the same way modern books are, but rather in codex form, where pages were folded and stitched together.
no, bark
Robert Henderson Clapperton has written: 'The paper-making machine, its invention, evolution, and development' -- subject(s): Paper-making machinery, History 'Paper and its relationship to books' -- subject(s): Paper, Papermaking, Books, Materials
Marie Kelzer has written: 'Paste paper patterns' -- subject(s): Specimens, Paste papers, Paper, Decorative paper, Sample books
Mayan codices were ancient books created by the Maya civilization, primarily written on bark paper and folded like a screen. These codices contained a wealth of information, including historical records, religious texts, astronomical data, and rituals. Only a few survive today due to the climate, destruction by Spanish conquistadors, and other factors, making them invaluable for understanding Mayan culture and history. They are typically written in hieroglyphics and are considered some of the few surviving examples of pre-Columbian literature.
The Aztecs and Maya cultures in Mesoamerica wrote in bark paper books known as codices. These codices were important for recording religious rituals, calendrical information, and historical events. They were created by painting symbols and images on long strips of bark paper that were folded accordion-style to create a book.
Nancy Bittner has written: 'A Selected bibliography on paper conservation' -- subject(s): Paper, Conservation and restoration, Books, Preservation
Nicolangelo Scianna has written: 'Solving cases--book and paper artefact restoration' -- subject(s): Books, Conservation and restoration, Preservation, Paper
Jean G. Kropper has written: 'Papermaking' -- subject(s): Handmade Paper, Paper work, Paper, Handmade, Papermaking 'Handmade Cards & Books (Lothian Craft Series)'
Janne Ovaska has written: 'Sand-paper comix' -- subject(s): Comic books, strips