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From the elemental forces that drive our expanding universe to the delicate hairs on the back of your neck, science offers talented writers the kind of scope that other subjects simply cant match. This dynamic genre of Australian writing has never, until now, been showcased in an ...
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Telling people about research is just as important as doing it. But many researchers, who, in all other respects, are competent scientists, are afraid of writing. They are wary of the unwritten rules, the unspoken dogma and the inexplicably complex style, all of which seem to pe ...
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A leading science writer examines how the brain reaches its peak in middle age, and how to keep it there. For many years, scientists thought that the human brain simply decayed over time, leading to memory slips, fuzzy logic, negative thinking and even depression. Author is The T ...
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In Roger's World , Charles Siebert encounters a chimpanzee in a Florida retirement home for former ape entertainers, stars of the big screen, TV shows and commercials, and Big Top circuses. Of the 46 retirees at this facility, Roger, a 28-year-old former Ringling Brothers enterta ...
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Creativity: It's singing the song that has never been sung and solving the problem that seems impossible. It's the free verse poem and the mathematical equation, the abstract painter and the patient inventor. It's the ability to see the world as it is, and then to imagine how it ...
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In 1996, Clea Koff was a 23 year old student studying prehistoric skeletons. She was sent to Rwanda by the UN to exume the victims of genocide.
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The brand new book of fun science stories from Australia's best-loved science guru, Dr Karl Kruszelnicki.
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The extraordinary story of a a biological riddle that confounded scientists for nearly ninety years - the beguiling, elusive platypus.
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Students create working models to understand Earth and Space: the solar system, sundials, latitude and gravity. Energy and forces: catching the wind, axles, pulleys, levers, wheels and pendulums. Optics, light and colour: mirrors, the spectrum. Includes expanations and across-the ...
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A new discovery called neuroplasticity is overthrowing the centuries-old notion that the adult human brain is fixed and unchanging. It is, instead, able to change its own structure and function, even into old age. We see a woman born with half a brain that rewired itself to work ...
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