The New York Times Second Book of Science Questions and Answers : 225 New, Unusual, Intriguing, and Just Plain Bizarre Inquiries Into Everyday Scientific Mysteries

the new york times second book of science questions and answers : 225 new, unusual, intriguing, and just plain bizarre inquiries into everyday scientific mysteries

more information about The New York Times Second Book of Science Questions and Answers : 225 New, Unusual, Intriguing, and Just Plain Bizarre Inquiries Into Everyday Scientific Mysteries

The New York Times Second Book of Science Questions and Answers : 225 New, Unusual, Intriguing, and Just Plain Bizarre Inquiries Into Everyday Scientific Mysteries

Editorial Reviews
Book Description
What would kill you if you fell into a black hole? Once people finally get to Mars, how will they get back? What makes the holes in Swiss cheese? Are there any carnivorous plants that are harmful to humans? Are there really caterpillars that scream to protect themselves? How do birds have sexual intercourse? Why don’t woodpeckers damage their brains? What is the function of ear wax? Why don’t you sneeze when you’re asleep? Do germs have germs? What is considered evidence for extra-terrestial intelligence?

Every week, C. Claiborne Ray answers questions like these from the readers of the New York Times Science section who, as this delightful second volume demonstrates, never seem to run out of things to ask about. Here, Ray gives us 225 of the most interesting answers she has gleaned from scientists in every discipline, satisfying our desire to understand some of the strangest, most curious mysteries of the natural world. Victoria Roberts’s charmingly wacky drawings add to the fun.

Inside Flap Copy
What would kill you if you fell into a black hole? Once people finally get to Mars, how will they get back? What makes the holes in Swiss cheese? Are there any carnivorous plants that are harmful to humans? Are there really caterpillars that scream to protect themselves? How do birds have sexual intercourse? Why don?t woodpeckers damage their brains? What is the function of ear wax? Why don?t you sneeze when you?re asleep? Do germs have germs? What is considered evidence for extra-terrestial intelligence?

Every week, C. Claiborne Ray answers questions like these from the readers of the New York Times Science section who, as this delightful second volume demonstrates, never seem to run out of things to ask about. Here, Ray gives us 225 of the most interesting answers she has gleaned from scientists in every discipline, satisfying our desire to understand some of the strangest, most curious mysteries of the natural world. Victoria Roberts?s charmingly wacky drawings add to the fun.

The New York Times Second Book of Science Questions and Answers : 225 New, Unusual, Intriguing, and Just Plain Bizarre Inquiries Into Everyday Scientific Mysteries

The New York Times Second Book of Science Questions and Answers: 225 New, Unusual, Intriguing, and Just Plain Bizarre Inquiries Into Everyday Scientific Mysteries,C. Claiborne Ray,Anchor,0385722583,Miscellanea,Questions & Answers,Reference,Science,Science/Mathematics,Science / Reference

Discount Books:

  1. The Psychology of Science and the Origins of the Scientific Mind
  2. The Roving Mind
  3. The Science of the HitchHiker's Guide to the Galaxy
  4. The Sciences: An Integrated Approach, 2nd Edition Update
  5. The Whale and the Reactor : A Search for Limits in an Age of High Technology
  6. Time's Arrow and Archimedes' Point : New Directions for the Physics of Time
  7. Time's Pendulum: From Sundials to Atomic Clocks, the Fascinating History of Timekeeping and How Our Discoveries Changed the World
  8. Twin Telepathy: The Psychic Connection
  9. Understanding Cloning (Science Made Accessible)
  10. Vision in Elementary Mathematics

Discount Books

Discount Books

Recommended Books

  1. Contemporary American Women Sculptors
  2. Doonesbury Redux : Duke 2000 and Revolt of the English Majors
  3. Untouchable: A Biography of Robert DeNiro
  4. The Yen / Dollar Agreement : Liberalizing Japanese Capital Markets
  5. Turning Points: Your Career Decision-Making Guide
  6. Too Few Happy Endings: The Dilemma of the Humane Societies
  7. Thermal Analysis, 3rd Edition
  8. The Post-Darwinian Controversies : A Study of the Protestant Struggle to Come to Terms with Darwin i
  9. True North
  10. UpDating! : How to Get a Man or Woman Who Once Seemed Out of Your League
  11. Who's Who of Cats
  12. Topiary Basics: The Art Of Shaping Plants In Gardens & Containers
  13. Turkey and the War on Terror For Thirty Years We Fought Alone
  14. Turing and the Universal Machine : The Making of the Modern Computer
  15. Tube Flies: A Tying, Fishing & Historical Guide