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Books with author Mary Kay Carson

  • Mission to Pluto: The First Visit to an Ice Dwarf and the Kuiper Belt

    Mary Kay Carson, Tom Uhlman

    eBook (HMH Books for Young Readers, Jan. 10, 2017)
    In July of 2015 a robotic spacecraft reached Pluto after a nine-and-half-year journey. New Horizons is the first spacecraft mission to Pluto and revealed its five moons as never before seen. Images from the mission show a reddish surface covered in ice-water mountains, moving glaciers, and hints of possible ice volcanoes and an underground ocean. Pluto is geologically alive and changing! This addition to the Scientists in the Field series goes where no person or spacecraft has ever gone before. Follow along with the team of scientists as they build New Horizons, fly it across the solar system, and make new discoveries about a world three billion miles away.
  • The Tornado Scientist

    Mary Kay Carson, Tom Uhlman

    eBook (HMH Books for Young Readers, March 19, 2019)
    In this addition to the critically-acclaimed Scientist in the Field series, scientist Robin Tanamachi and her team are trying to save countless lives across America’s heartland, chasing one tornado at a time. Robin Tanamachi has been captivated by tornadoes and extreme weather her entire life. When she realized people researched weather for a job, she was hooked. She now studies tornadogenesis, or how tornadoes form, and what causes them to get weaker versus strengthen. For her, driving around in a Doppler radar truck aiming towards storms is a normal day in the office. The data she collects is then modeled and studied on computers—with math, physics, and computer science working hand in hand with meteorology. At the end of the day, knowing exactly how, when, and where these violent storms happen can give more warning time for everyone involved.
  • Extreme Planets Q&A

    Mary Kay Carson

    Hardcover (Collins, Jan. 1, 2008)
    Some planets are extremely big—so huge that 1,300 Earths could fit inside one. Some planets are extremely little—smaller than Earth's moon. Some planets are extremely fast—speeding through space at 104,000 miles an hour. Some planets may not be planets at all! Extreme Planets Q&A has answers to questions such as: What makes up a planet? Why is Earth the only known world where life exists? How can a planet's day actually be longer than its year? So buckle up as you blast off for an extreme voyage through the solar system, from Mercury to Neptune and beyond!
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  • In the Deep

    Mary Kay Carson

    Paperback (Newbridge Discovery Links, March 15, 2002)
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  • Inside Biosphere 2: Earth Science Under Glass

    Mary Kay Carson, Tom Uhlman

    eBook (HMH Books for Young Readers, Oct. 13, 2015)
    In the Arizona desert, scientists conduct studies and experiments aimed to help us better understand our environment and what sort of things are happening to it due to climate change. The location is Biosphere 2, an immense structure that contains a replica ocean, savannah, and rainforest, among other Earth biomes. It’s a unique take on the Scientists in the Field mission statement — in this case, the lab is a replica that allows the scientists to conduct large-scale experiments that would otherwise be impossible.
  • Inside Weather

    Mary Kay Carson

    Hardcover (Sterling Children's Books, Aug. 16, 1719)
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  • What Makes a Tornado Twist?: And Other Questions about Weather

    Mary Kay Carson

    Hardcover (Sterling Children's Books, Aug. 16, 1860)
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  • The Bat Scientists

    Mary Kay Carson, Tom Uhlman

    Paperback (HMH Books for Young Readers, Aug. 13, 2013)
    “Rich with fascinating information and photographs.”—Horn Book Dr. Merlin Tuttle is fascinated by bats, with good reason. Bats fly the night skies the world over, but are the least studied of all mammals. As the major predator of night-flying insects, bats eat many pests. But bats are facing many problems, including a scary new disease. White-nose syndrome is killing millions of bats in North America. Dr. Tuttle and his fellow bat scientists are on the front line of the fight to save their beloved bats. Find more about this series at www.sciencemeetsadventure.com.
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  • How Many Planets Circle the Sun?: And Other Questions About Our Solar System

    Mary Kay Carson, Ron Miller

    Paperback (Sterling Children's Books, Jan. 7, 2014)
    Why is there life on earth? How did Saturn get its rings? Which planet is biggest, which one's hottest—and which has a cloud named Scooter? Take a trip into outer space to learn about the asteroid belt, Martian volcanoes, dwarf planets, and other fascinating facts about our universe.
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  • What Was Your Dream, Dr. King?: And Other Questions About... Martin Luther King Jr.

    Mary Kay Carson, Jim Madsen

    Paperback (Sterling Children's Books, Jan. 1, 2013)
    Why were schools, drinking fountains, and movie theatres segregated by race? Why did more than 250,000 people march in Washington, DC in 1963? What was Martin Luther King, Jr.'s big dream--and has it come true? All of these and other “must-know” questions about the civil rights hero are answered in this engaging new book.
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  • Inside Hurricanes

    Mary Kay Carson

    Flexibound (Sterling, Jan. 1, 1722)
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  • Park Scientists: Gila Monsters, Geysers, and Grizzly Bears in America's Own Backyard

    Mary Kay Carson, Tom Uhlman

    Hardcover (HMH Books for Young Readers, May 13, 2014)
    America's National Parks are protected places and have become living museums for as many as 270 million visitors per year! In addition, researchers are able to perform long term studies of a wide number of subjects from salamanders the size of thumbnails to gigantic geothermal geysers. These parks are natural laboratories for scientists. Did you know that Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming sits on top of an active (and very large) volcano? This volcano is monitored and studied on a daily basis, not only as a means of protection (though it seems a long way off from erupting) but also as a way of understanding how the environment changes and influences what goes on deep underground. The scientists profiled in The Park Scientists also study grizzly bears in Yellowstone, the majestic Sagauro catci in Arizona, and fireflies in Tennessee -- and suggest many ways for the average reader of any age to help out. The emphasis here is twofold: the great science that happens everyday in these important, protected spaces, and the fact that you can visit all of them and participate in the research. It's backyard science at its biggest and best in this resourceful addition to the Scientists in the Field series!
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