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On Blame
  • Language: en

On Blame

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2021-08-10
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Author of The Handover and investigative journalist Elaine Dewar's On Blame: Investigating the Origins of the Worst Pandemic in 100 Years is a contemporary whodunnit separating facts of COVID-19 from the conspiracy theories and featuring the untold stories of the scientists, the networks, the governments, and their interests.

Bones
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 642

Bones

Scientists not so long ago unanimously believed that people first walked to the New World from northeast Asia across the Bering land bridge at the end of the Ice Age 11,000 years ago. But in the last ten years, new tools applied to old bones have yielded evidence that tells an entirely different story. In Bones, Elaine Dewar records the ferocious struggle in the scientific world to reshape our views of prehistory. She traveled from the Mackenzie River valley in northern Canada to the arid plains of the Brazilian state of Piaui, from the skull-and-bones-lines offices of the Smithsonian Institution to the basement lab of an archaeologist in Washington State who wondered if the FBI was going to...

Cloak of Green
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 516

Cloak of Green

Most concerned citizens trust environmental groups to fight on behalf of the public for sensible solutions to the world's most pressing problems. But Elaine Dewar discovered that this trust is often misplaced. In this book the award-winning journalist explores links between key environmental groups, government and big business. Written like a mystery, Cloak of Green follows the author from a Toronto fundraiser for the Kayapo Indians of Brazil to the Amazon rainforest and the global backrooms of Brasilia, Washington and Geneva. Along the way she meets some fascinating peopleAnita Roddick of the Body Shop, businessman-politican Maurice Strong, and activists who run key Canadian and American environmental groups. She discovers some disturbing revelations about these groups and their relations to "green" corporations and government. Cloak of Green is a penetrating investigative study that challenges many established pieties of the environmental movement.

The Second Tree
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 662

The Second Tree

The Second Tree documents a biological revolution that will change the way you think about the material world, your own life and even the inevitability of your own death Genetic scientists are busily pushing back the boundaries of the humanly possible, climbing the branches of a tree of life that has been grafted by man, not God. Elaine Dewar chronicles the lives, the discoveries, and the feuds among modern biologists, exploring how they have crafted the tools to alter human evolution. She travels the globe on the trail of Charles Darwin and his intellectual descendants, telling the story of James D. Watson and his partner Francis Crick, who first described DNA; of Frederick Sanger, who inve...

The Hand-Over
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 208

The Hand-Over

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2017-05-16
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  • Publisher: Unknown

How control of Canada's iconic publisher, McClelland and Stewart, was transferred over to a foreign-owned corporation.

Smarts
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 660

Smarts

SMARTS tells the stories of the brilliant scientists who are redefining what intelligence is, and who, or what, displays it. Merging Darwin's ideas with Alan Turing's, they have found intelligence everywhere, while turning it into a process to be used. SMARTS' characters include the mysterious Turing, the infamous eugenicist Francis Galton, ethologist Frans B.M. de Waal and his political chimpanzees, Anne E. Russon and her miming orangutans; Dario Floreano and his altruistic robots, Stefano Mancuso and his masterful plants, engineer/philosopher Chris Eliasmith whose Spaun is as smart as the average university student and will be coming soon to a robot near you. There are slime molds that compute, octopuses that signal in colors they cannot see, spies, deaths, and disappearances. Part history, part memoir, SMARTS is a report from the front where machines are getting way too smart, and smart life is being machined. Includes extensive end notes, bibliography and index.

Bones
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 640

Bones

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2004-07-21
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  • Publisher: Basic Books

Award-winning journalist Elaine Dewar explores new terrain with Bones, uncovering evidence that challenges the conventional wisdom on how the Americas were peopled in early history. In her probing investigation, Dewar travels from Canada's Mackenzie River to the Brazilian state of Piaui, from the offices of the Smithsonian Institution to the Washington state riverbank where the remains of Kennewick man were found. Dewar captures a tale of hard science and human folly where the high stakes include professional reputations, lucrative grants, fame, and the resting places of wandering spirits.

On the Origin of the Deadliest Pandemic in 100 Years
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 411

On the Origin of the Deadliest Pandemic in 100 Years

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2021-08-11
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  • Publisher: Biblioasis

In this compelling whodunnit, Elaine Dewar reads the science, follows the money, and connects the geopolitical interests to the spin. When the first TV newscast described a SARS-like flu affecting a distant Chinese metropolis, investigative journalist Elaine Dewar started asking questions: Was SARS-CoV-2 something that came from nature, as leading scientists insisted, or did it come from a lab, and what role might controversial experiments have played in its development? Why was Wuhan the pandemic's ground zero—and why, on the other side of the Atlantic, had two researchers been marched out of a lab in Winnipeg by the RCMP? Why were governments so slow to respond to the emerging pandemic, ...

The Reichmanns
  • Language: en

The Reichmanns

Bianco's riveting family saga tells "a gripping tale of huge talent, huge fortune, and even huger hubris. . . . A fine, well-researched, and elegantly written book" ("Los Angeles Times Book Review".) 16-page photo insert.

Riddle of the Bones
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 238

Riddle of the Bones

From its discovery in the Columbia River three years ago, reporter Roger Downey has chronicled the epic adventures of the skeleton called "Kennewick Man": first as a pretext for a media feeding-frenzy, then as the centerpiece of a legal circus pitting celebrated scientists against Native Americans, the Corps of Engineers, and the Clinton White House, finally, at long last, as an object of rational scientific study. The saga of Kennewick Man offers abundant opportunity to explore today's rapidly-changing scientific theories about how the Americas first came to be settled, and by whom. But it also casts much light on the deep divisions within the fields of anthropology and archeology concerning the role of politics and race in the pursuit of scientific goals, what constitutes ethical procedure in dealing with ancient human remains and living individuals, and the very purpose and direction of the scientific enterprise itself. With an easy style that keeps you hooked from beginning to end, Downey describes the major players in this continuing debate and details the controversial scientific, religious, and political arguments surrounding Kennewick Man.