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>> Download Why Don't Penguins' Feet Freeze?: And 114 Other Questions, by New Scientist

Download Why Don't Penguins' Feet Freeze?: And 114 Other Questions, by New Scientist

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Why Don't Penguins' Feet Freeze?: And 114 Other Questions, by New Scientist

Why Don't Penguins' Feet Freeze?: And 114 Other Questions, by New Scientist



Why Don't Penguins' Feet Freeze?: And 114 Other Questions, by New Scientist

Download Why Don't Penguins' Feet Freeze?: And 114 Other Questions, by New Scientist

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Why Don't Penguins' Feet Freeze?: And 114 Other Questions, by New Scientist

• What time is it at the North Pole?

• What's the chemical formula for a human being?

• Why do boomerangs come back?

• Why do flying fish fly?

• Do the living really outnumber the dead?

• Why does lightning fork?

• Why does the end of a whip crack?

Everyone has at one time or another thought up odd questions like these, questions that are strange, intriguing, maybe even impossible to answer. Making your morning omelet, perhaps you've wondered why most eggs are egg shaped. Or maybe, the last time you walked on the beach, you felt compelled to ask why the sea is salty. Watching Polly sit on her perch, have you ever marveled at how she stays there -- even when she's asleep? Well, the readers of New Scientist's wildly popular, long-running column "The Last Word" thought of these questions, too, and weren't afraid to ask them.

Why Don't Penguins' Feet Freeze? is a brilliant collection of questions and answers for everyone who enjoyed the international, runaway bestseller Does Anything Eat Wasps? Guaranteed to amaze, inform, and delight with topics such as the human body, plants and animals, weird weather, and our wacky world, it'll stump you, enlighten you, entertain and amuse you.

  • Sales Rank: #501335 in Books
  • Brand: Atria Books
  • Published on: 2007-06-05
  • Released on: 2007-06-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.44" h x .70" w x 5.50" l, .48 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 224 pages
Features
  • Great product!

From Publishers Weekly
A sequel of sorts to the bestselling Does Anything Eat Wasps?, this compilation of readers' questions and answers published in "The Last Word" column of New Scientist Magazine prove there really is no such thing as a stupid question: reader questions "Why is nasal mucus often green?"; "Why doesn't superglue stick to the inside of its tube?"; "Why is red meat red and white meat white?"; and "What time is it at the North Pole?" all draw serious consideration from their fellow readers, as well as personal stories, myths, jokes and even a poem (on why the sea is salty). Readers will learn that helium atoms are small enough to diffuse through the elastic material of a balloon, which is why balloons deflate; they'll also learn how to hypnotize a mynah bird and why "fish don't fart"; the conflagration of trivia, knowledge, anecdote and humor should entertain just about anyone.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
The latest collection of "Last Words" columns from New Scientist magazine, in which experts in various fields responds to readers' questions, is entertaining and enlightening. Sorted into several categories--"Our Bodies," "Weird Weather," etc.--the questions deal mainly with everyday matters. Why do we sneeze when we emerge from the shade into the light? (Theories vary.) Why do our knuckles make that sound when we crack them? (Bubbles of nitrogen gas popping in the joints.) Why do we cry when we slice an onion? (Amino acids are released into the air, acting as an irritant.) We learn a lot of interesting stuff, and it's surprising how many common questions have no definitive answer: for example, hot water either does or does not freeze faster than cold water, depending on whom you listen to. Trivia nuts, especially fans of the earlier book Does Anything Eat Wasps? (2006),not to mention David Feldman's long-running Imponderables series, will eat this one up. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
An ideal Christmas gift for lovers of the strange and baffling. Publishing News A fascinating mix of the baffling, ridiculous and trivial ... answers the scientific questions you never got round to asking. Daily Express They are the things we've all wondered about, from why we cry when we slice onions, to what makes our hair turn grey Daily Mirror The answers to life's most perplexing questions ... at last, the mysteries of the world are explained ... the book everyone is talking about Independent on Sunday [An] extraordinary book ... responsible for putting popular science back on its feet. Radio 5 Live If you have ever wondered why hair turns grey, fingers get crinkled in the bath or if the Great Wall of China really is visible from space, Mick O'Hare has the answers. CNN

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Fun look at science, volume two
By Peter Durward Harris
In 1994, the New Scientist started a column, The last word, devoted to everyday science questions asked by readers, with answers also provided by readers. Originally expected to survive for between one and five years, the column survived way beyond that and as far as I know, it is still going strong. Two books compiled from these columns didn't do much business but a third (Does anything eat wasps?) was a huge success. Its success prompted a subsequent volume (this one), that selects questions and answers from those two unsuccessful volumes and adds questions of more recent origin. A further volume, Do polar bears get lonely?, has also proved hugely successful.

This book consists of nine chapters covering our bodies, feeling OK, plants and animals, food and drink, domestic science, our planet and universe, weird weather, troublesome transport and, for questions that don't fit easily into any of those categories, best of the rest. Note that these chapter headings are slightly different from the previous volume. Two new ones (feeling OK, food and drink) have been added while our planet and universe are combined in one chapter here.

The question that gives the book its title provoked some very good answers explaining how penguins cope with life in the Antarctic, but there`s a more interesting (at least to me) penguin question elsewhere in the book. If polar bears and penguins swapped places, could they survive. The answer seems to be that polar bears would survive in the Antarctic but they would devastate the eco-system and penguins would be particularly vulnerable. Penguins might be capable of surviving in those parts of the Arctic where there are no polar bears, but there's another species that would make their life difficult - us. Attempts to establish northern penguin colonies have failed because people couldn't co-exist with them.

Another question that particularly grabbed my attention was what the time is at the North pole. It sounds easy but of course it isn't, since the pole is on Earth's axis and therefore not in any particular time zone. A variety of answers are supplied, some serious, some not. One of the serious answers explains how it would be possible, using astronomy, to set up some kind of clock, summing that you didn't take a clock or watch with you. One of the less serious answers points out that Father Christmas lives there and, it being in no particular time zone, explains how he is able to deliver all his presents so quickly. Another answer suggests that the North Pole is the true spiritual home of all politicians, because the time can be whatever you want.

The variety of the questions asked and the answers provided is incredible, although I confess that I wouldn't have actually considered asking most of these questions. While this book provides very informative answers, I suspect that you'll have most fun with it if you share it with family and friends.

4 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Mostly stupid answers
By Andy Anderson
I thought this would be a book with real scientific answers to trivial, everyday phenomena. What I got was a book with a question, followed by a bunch of answers from mostly morons who obviously don't have a clue. Those responses are, luckily, pretty easy to spot, but why should I have to even glance over them? The answer is likely so the author could get his page count to over two hundred.

Anyone can come up with a stupid answer to questions like, "Why do some people sneeze when exposed to bright light." If you want a serious answer, you unfortunately have to sort through a bunch of crap written by people who couldn't make it as comedians.

You may end up identifying the correct answer, if there is one, or you may not. The really disappointing part of it is that, because of all the silly responses, you never really know.

If you're OK with that, fine. If not, don't buy the book.

1 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Fun and Interesting
By Abbey Strauss
Fun to read. It also caught the attention of my teenagers. It has many interesting facts that worked their way into meal time discussions and questions during a long road trip. It makes science into fun, and is a book equal to the Discovery and History Channels.

See all 17 customer reviews...

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