
National Geographic #'00/06: Indus - Clues to an Ancient Civilization
One copy is available

One copy is available
Are you interested in another book? You can search the offer using our search engine or browse books by category.
The German publicist's book contains a series of witty, but scientifically based answers to unusual questions such as: why was the sea created, why is the sky blue, why do fireflies glow, why do we dream...
David Whitehouse, a British astronomer and journalist, creates a living "biography" of our star in the book "The Sun: A Biography," combining history, myth, and science in a journey from the birth of the Sun to its final extinction.
At the Sources of Mathematics is a popular science work by Croatian mathematician, Japanologist, and academician Vladimir Devidé (1925–2010), published in 1979 in Osijek.
Basic information and amazing facts about the development of transport and means of transport from the very beginnings to the modern world that is always on the move.
This remarkable work follows the story of the development of science from the invention of the wheel to the latest inventions in the 21st century. It chronicles every key moment of discovery and shows how ideas, inventions and the people behind them chang
Michael A. Cook, Princeton professor of Islamic history, provides an overview of human history from the Neolithic to the fall of the Twin Towers in 2001 in this witty and intelligent synthesis, asking the key question: why did everything happen exactly th