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Books with title Scientists

  • Mad Scientists' Club

    Bertrand R. Brinley

    Paperback (Scholastic Paperbacks, Jan. 1, 1983)
    The boys are back after 40 years! Author's Edition with previously unpublished text restored from the original manuscripts. A strange sea monster appears on the lake ...a fortune is unearthed from an old cannon ...a valuable dinosaur egg is stolen. Watch out as the Mad Scientists turn Mammoth Falls upside down! Take seven, lively, "normal" boys -- one an inventive genius -- give them a clubhouse for cooking up ideas, an electronics lab above the town hardware store, and a good supply of Army surplus equipment, and you, dear reader, have a boyhood dream come true and a situation that bears watching. In the hands of an author whose own work involved technological pioneering, the proceedings are well worth undivided attention, as the boys explore every conceivable possibility for high and happy adventure in the neighborhood of Mammoth Falls. To the unutterable confusion of the local dignitaries -- and the unalloyed delight of Bertrand Brinley's fans -- the young heroes not only outwit their insidious rival, Harmon Muldoon, but emerge as town heroes. Here, captured under one cover, are the fun-filled escapades of the young scientists whose exciting capers debuted in Boys' Life magazine 40 years ago.
  • Science and Scientists

    Kang Zhu

    Library Binding (Long River Press, July 1, 2005)
    Ancient China has a long history of scientific excellence. Learn more about some of Chinaโ€™s greatest scientific wonders and the scientists who studied them. Features stories about astronomy, seismology, mathematics, calendar-making, and geography.
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  • Great Scientists

    John Farndon, Alex Woolf, Anne Rooney, Liz Gogerly

    Library Binding (Rosen Pub Group, Dec. 15, 2012)
    Profiles influential scientists and their discoveries, including Nicolas Copernicus, Charles Darwin, and Albert Einstein.
  • Great Scientists

    JacquelineFortey

    Hardcover (DKPublishing(DorlingKindersley), June 30, 2007)
    Title: Great Scientists [With Clip-Art CD] <>Binding: Hardcover <>Author: JacquelineFortey <>Publisher: DKPublishing(DorlingKindersley)
  • Mad Scientist

    Jennifer L. Holm, Matthew, Matthew Holm

    Library Binding (Turtleback Books, May 10, 2011)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Babymouse is determined to become a famous scientist, but she doesn't have any ideas for a project. Then she discovers an amoeba named Squish, who eats cupcakes.
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  • Rocket Scientists

    Barbara Linde

    Library Binding (PowerKids Press, Jan. 15, 2016)
    Rocket scientists are very smart, and theyre also very adventurous. Designing and studying rockets is an exciting career that involves science, technology, engineering, and math. Readers discover how rocket scientists apply these areas of STEM in their everyday work. Informative main text, fun fact boxes, and a detailed graphic organizer guide readers through stories of what rocket scientists do. Colorful photographs of rocket scientists in action accompany the exciting, career-focused text. How do rocket scientists get their rockets to successfully blast off? The answers to this question and many more are waiting for readers!
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  • Mad Scientists

    Gill Arbuthnott, Mike Phillips

    Paperback (Barrington Stoke Ltd, )
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  • Mad Scientists

    Karl Edward Wagn Schiff, Stuart David (edited by) [Ray Russell, Ramsey Campbell

    Hardcover (Doubleday, Oct. 15, 1980)
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  • Water Scientists

    William Rice

    Library Binding (Compass Point Books, Jan. 1, 2010)
    Water is the most important resource on Earth. We drink it, wash with it, clean with it, and even study it. Without water, nothing could exist. Scientists who study water are called hydrologists. They make sure our water is clean and safe, design systems to move and collect water, and know where to find fresh sources of water. For more information on water, read Inside the Water Cycle, another book in the Mission: Science series.
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  • Weather Scientists

    Debra J. Housel, Robin S. Doak

    Library Binding (Compass Point Books, Jan. 1, 2010)
    Long ago, people believed that the gods made the weather. Gods were responsible for the sun shining, the wind blowing, and the rain falling. Until the mid 1500s, most people had little or no understanding of how the weather worked. Galileo Galilei built the first thermometer in the early 1600s. Later inventors later created ways to measure and record the temperature more accurately. Today weather scientists called meteorologists study and report the weather. For more information on weather, read Investigating Storms, another book in the Mission: Science series.
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  • Hispanic Scientists

    Jetty St John

    Library Binding (Capstone Press, March 16, 1996)
    Book by St John, Jetty
  • Top 101 Scientists

    Elizabeth Lachner

    Library Binding (Rosen Education Service, Aug. 15, 2016)
    We owe our understanding of the world around us to the insights and experiments of countless scientists. This volume introduces just over one hundred of the most influential figures in the history of the field. It spans thousands of years, from Thales of Miletus (who flourished in the sixth century BCE) to living luminaries, such as Craig Mello, Neil deGrasse Tyson, and Shinya Yamanaka. The varied and fascinating list includes physicists, chemists, anthropologists, astronomers, geologists, biologists, and more, all of whom have added to our store of scientific knowledge.
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