Date Range
Date Range
Date Range
But what do the words mean? Asked the wondering Mole. - The Wind in the Willows. Thursday, December 30, 2010. This awesome challenge is hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books. And it is all about reading works by authors who have been recommended to you but whom you have not had a chance to read yet. Wednesday, December 29, 2010. Wednesday, May 19, 2010.
The Barn Owls of San Marcos. Welcome to the site about. Please view any pages to the right for answers to questions about this pair, their brood, and beautiful barn owls! Click on any of the FAQ pages to rights. Watch Molly live on Ustream. Posted in Leave a Comment. The Owl Box Chat Room Rules. Gee That Was Fun! 3,815,282 Hits.
The official blog of the Victorian Branch of the Australian Skeptics. Vic Skeptics produces original classroom material, which we make available free. Teaching and learning, but it serves a wide range of topics and age groups. We invite you to look over and sample our down-loadable . Or click on the USEFUL INFO. Tab at the top of the page.
August 31st 2015, 7pm. All Science On Tap events are open to the public. No science background is required! Ravenna Third Place Pub. In the basement of the Ravenna Third Place Bookstore. NE, Seattle, WA 98115.
Beare Distinguished Professor of Biomedical Engineering. Is a place where, for the price of a beverage, anyone can come to explore the latest ideas in science and technology. Meetings take place outside a traditional academic context, at the Kirkwood Station Restaurant and Brewing Co. Meetings are held on the last Wednesday.
Join us the first wednesday of the month. Live stream now commercial free. Programs are live-streamed at the Minocqua Public Library each month. Pretzels and root beer will be served. Science on Tap will not meet in July and August. The secret lives of bumblebees. Limate Change and Global Health. Science on Tap in the News. Watch Science on Tap live.
As a project for this year, I am writing a blog about my favorite subject, science. I love it so much because I have 32-acre classroom where science leaps out of the textbook and into everyday farm life. Friday, January 2, 2009. When walking around in the woods this fall, taking pictures, the sight of a skull sitting in the dirt, caught my eye. At closer examination, I immediately identified it as the Odocoileus virginianus. I took this picture in the fall of 2006.