Science's Most Wanted(TM): Outrageous Innovators, Deadly Disasters, and Shocking Discoveries

by Linda Kitchen, Susan Conner
Science's Most Wanted(TM): Outrageous Innovators, Deadly Disasters, and Shocking Discoveries Book Image
  • Binding: Paperback
  • ISBN: 1574884816
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  • Amazon Sales Rank: 2295883
  • Amazon Customer Rating: Avg. Customer Rating for 'Science's Most Wanted(TM): Outrageous Innovators, Deadly Disasters, and Shocking Discoveries is ' out of 5
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  • Title:

    Science's Most Wanted(TM): Outrageous Innovators, Deadly Disasters, and Shocking Discoveries

  • Reading Level: Paperback
  • Binding: Paperback
  • No. of Pages: 304
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  • Publisher: Potomac Books Inc.
  • Pub. Date:
  • ISBN: 1574884816
  • Product Size (W x H x L) inches: 5.04 x 0.85 x 8
  • Shipping Weight: 0.67
  • Average Customer Review: Customer Rating for 'Science's Most Wanted(TM): Outrageous Innovators, Deadly Disasters, and Shocking Discoveries ' is  out of 5 See Customer Reviews
  • Amazon Sales Rank: 2295883

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Science and technology have had more than their share of the good, the bad, and the bogus. Alfred William Lawson, the designer of the first airliner, believed that two types of creatures lived within the brain— “Menorgs,” which were the mental organizers responsible for all good things, and “Disorgs,” which infect all cells with disorganization. Chonosuke Okamura collected and catalogued what he thought were tiny men and animals, all 1/100-inch long, which most geologists think are actually mineral grains. Peter Fong found that the expression “happy as a clam” had a scientific basis when he tested the effects of Prozac on fingernail clams. The dashing figure of dinosaur hunter Roy Chapman Andrews was the model upon which Indiana Jones was based. Physician John Brinkley believed that consuming goat glands would restore youth and virility. In keeping with the format of the popular “Most Wanted™” Series, this new volume comprises sixty top-ten lists. These include worst ideas by great scientists, most unlikely inventors, greatest unsolved mysteries, most ridiculous attempts at flight, biggest hoaxes, most suppressed inventions, and top UFO sightings. Science's Most Wanted™shows how throughout history, mankind has tried, often wildly unsuccessfully, to come to grips with life’s biggest questions.

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