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Books in Making Sense of Science series

  • Brainbox

    Steven Rose, Fran Balkwill, MIC Rolph

    Paperback (Portland Pr, Nov. 1, 1997)
    What happens when you read? Your eyes do the seeing, your mind does the thinking and your fingers turn the pages. These parts of your body are co-ordinated by your brain. What does your brain look like and what is it made of? There are a hundred times more nerve cells inside your head than there are people alive in the world! These nerve cells carry electrical messages, not just within the brain, but to each and every part of your body. Your brain has to do much more than receive messages and send them out again: making and storing memories, for instance, and controlling feelings and behaviour. What is so special about your brain? Find out how to keep it fit and busy. Play some games that will really boggle your brain.
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  • The Earth and Space

    Peter Riley

    Hardcover (Watts Pub Group, Aug. 31, 2004)
    Forces and Movement looks at the different forces from gravity to friction and the effects they have on objects and their movement. The Earth and Space explores how the Earth moves around the Sun and its position in space as a whole. Both books consider how the ancient Greeks explained these phenomena and why the work of people like Newton and Galileo led their ideas to be reinterpreted.
  • The Human Body

    Peter D. Riley

    Library Binding (Creative Co, July 30, 2005)
    Explores the physiology of the human body, covering such topics as the skeleton, the central nervous system and the brain, digestion, and respiration.
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  • Satellite Fever

    Mike Painter, Fran Balkwill, Mic Rolph

    Paperback (Portland Press, March 12, 1997)
    Orbiting around the Earth, out of sight and out of mind, are hundreds of man-made satellites. You are safer and healthier because of satellites and so is the planet. Satellites let you talk to your friends across the continents. You watch live world-wide television with their help. They guide you when you travel and show you most interesting images of deep space. But how do you make a satellite that will work outside Earth's atmosphere, where it is 150°C in the sun and -273°C in the shade? How do you get a satellite into space without it falling to bits on the way? Some day soon satellites will be off to explore Saturn, the Sun and the comet 'Wirtanen'. They might even be delivered into orbit by space planes that would cross the world in under two hours.
  • The Earth in Space

    Peter Riley

    Paperback (Franklin Watts Ltd, May 29, 2008)
    None
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  • Fitting in: Area, Pythagoras & Volume

    Sue Hough

    Paperback (Hodder Education, Oct. 22, 2012)
    None
  • Sound and Vibration

    Peter Riley

    Hardcover (Watts Pub Group, Jan. 31, 2005)
    None
  • Electricity and Power

    Peter Riley

    Hardcover (Watts Pub Group, Feb. 28, 2005)
    Key topics are explained through an original combination of science, history and practical investigations. Includes panels on scientific breakthroughs and scientific errors. Shows how science theory is established through scientific enquiry. Ages 10-14.
  • Sound and Vibrations

    Peter Riley

    Paperback (Franklin Watts Ltd, June 26, 2008)
    Key topics explained through an original combination of science, history and practical investigations
  • Fitting in: Area, Pythagoras & Volume

    Sue Hough

    Paperback (Hodder Education, Oct. 22, 2012)
    None
  • Exploring Sound

    Claire Llewellyn

    Library Binding (Sea to Sea Pubns, Aug. 1, 2008)
    A simple exploration of sound that covers pitch, volume, hearing and ears, how humans make sounds, and why animals make sounds.
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  • Forces and Movement

    Peter Riley

    Paperback (Franklin Watts Ltd, April 24, 2008)
    None
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