Who Discovered What When: Fully updated

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Who Discovered What When: Fully updated
Authors and Contributors      By (author) David Ellyard
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:372
ISBN/Barcode 9781760794675
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher New Holland Publishers
Imprint New Holland Publishers
NZ Release Date 1 August 2022
Publication Country Australia

Description

Fully updated and a brand new edition An absorbing introduction to the growth of scientific ideas and knowledge in the last 500 years. 'Who Discovered What When' is an absorbing introduction to the growth of scientific ideas and knowledge over the last 500 years. It sets those ideas in a context of time and place and introduces the reader to the people who brought them to life, such as Galileo, Newton, Darwin and Lavoisier. The book shows how science is a cumulative and interactive activity, with the work of one researcher feeding into that of their contemporaries and successors. It also illuminates the practice of science, briefly reviewing the methods employed and the evidence gathered in particular cases. Each chapter covers half a century and the pithy 200-300 word stories are arranged chronologically. A technology update for each century helps the reader to see the connection between scientific and technological development. Winner of the Eureka Awards for best manuscript on popular Science for the Australian Museum awards 2004.

Author Biography

David Ellyard has been closely involved with science all his working life. He has been a researcher, teacher and government policy advisor, and for more than 30 years a science communicate, working in radio television and print. He was also President of the Australian Science Communicators. His previous publications include books on weather and astronomy, and a prize-winning biography of the controversial Australian physicist and public figure Sir Mark Oliphant. Who Discovered What When? combines his love of history with his deep concern for the human and social impacts of new ideas and inventions.