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18 Wheels of Horror
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 304

18 Wheels of Horror

Psychotic killers, devious ghosts, alien monsters, howling storms, undead creatures, and other dark forces haunt the highways and the truckers who drive them in these 18 chilling tales! Contains the Bram Stoker Award winning story "Happy Joe's Rest Stop" by John Palisano. A ghostly voice on a trucker’s CB radio knows more about his life than it should… Two drivers find their cargo gives them inhuman appetites… A boy in a truck stop encounters a supernatural force that threatens to destroy the world… The hypnotic singing lulling a driver to sleep might not be coming from the tires… A fender-bender between a big rig and a four wheeler is not as accidental as it seems… The sinister cargo lurking in a rock and roll band’s fleet of trucks is unleashed at their final show... Hit the road with this anthology of trucking horror fiction!

War and Disease
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 266

War and Disease

Fighting around the globe, American soldiers were at high risk for contracting malaria, yet quinine - a natural cure - became hard to acquire. This historical study shows the roots and branches of an enormous drug development project during World War II.

New York Scientific
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 327

New York Scientific

This book introduces the reader to the visible memorabilia of science and scientists in all the five boroughs of New York City - statues, busts, plaques, buildings, and other artifacts. In addition, it extends to some scientists and institutions currently operating in the city. New York has been known as a world center of commerce, finance, communications, transportation, and culture, but it also is a world center in science. The city is home to renowned universities and research laboratories, a museum of natural history and other museums related to science, a science academy, historical societies, botanical gardens and zoos, libraries, and a Hall of Science as well as a large number of world-renowned scientists. The book pays special attention to the role of this city in welcoming persecuted scientists and letting African-American and women scientists thrive. The book is presented in an informative and entertaining way, dotted with scientific gossip and anecdotes, and can be enjoyed even without the reader's actual presence in the city. Over eight hundred photographs illustrate the book. They may induce the reader to make their own discoveries in New York.

Molecular World
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 461

Molecular World

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2023-07-04
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  • Publisher: MIT Press

A compelling and innovative account that reshapes our view of nineteenth-century chemistry, explaining a critical period in chemistry’s quest to understand and manipulate organic nature. According to existing histories, theory drove chemistry’s remarkable nineteenth-century development. In Molecular World, Catherine M. Jackson shows instead how novel experimental approaches combined with what she calls “laboratory reasoning” enabled chemists to bridge wet chemistry and abstract concepts and, in so doing, create the molecular world. Jackson introduces a series of practice-based breakthroughs that include chemistry’s move into lampworked glassware, the field’s turn to synthesis and...

March of the Pigments
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 501

March of the Pigments

Take a colorful walk through human ingenuity. Humans have been unpacking the earth to use pigments since cavemen times. Starting out from surface pigments for cave paintings, we’ve dug deep for minerals, mined oceans for colors and exploited the world of plants and animals. Our accidental fumbles have given birth to a whole family of brilliant blues that grace our museums, mansions and motorcars. We’ve turned waste materials into a whole rainbow of tints and hues to color our clothes, our food and ourselves. With the snip of a genetic scissor, we’ve harnessed bacteria to gift us with “greener” blue jeans and dazzling dashikis. As the pigments march on into the future, who knows wha...

The Evolution of Chemical Knowledge
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 130

The Evolution of Chemical Knowledge

Chemistry shapes and creates the disposition of the world's resources and provides novel substances for the welfare and hazard of our civilisation at an exponential rate. Can we model the evolution of chemical knowledge? This book not only provides a positive answer to the question, it provides the formal models and available data to model chemical knowledge as a complex dynamical system based on the mutual interaction of the social, semiotic and material systems of chemistry. These systems, which have evolved over the history, include the scientists and institutions supporting chemical knowledge (social system); theories, concepts and forms of communication (semiotic system) and the substan...

Strings of Pearls
  • Language: en

Strings of Pearls

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2013-09-19
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

What Is a Chemical Element?
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 313

What Is a Chemical Element?

"This book offers a comprehensive overview of an important notion to the field of chemistry: the chemical element"--

SSA Disability
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 94

SSA Disability

Between 1985 & 1994, the number of working-age people in fed. disability programs operated by the Social Security Admin. increased 59% from 4 to 6.3 million. Less than 1/2 of 1% of beneficiaries ever leave the disability rolls by returning to work. This report identifies: key practices used in the private sector to return disabled workers to the workplace (workers' compensation programs, & employer-sponsored disability insurance plans), & examples of how Germany & Sweden implement return-to-work strategies for people with disabilities. Charts.