Science
How can the sky be blue one day and stormy the next? Why do heavy objects tend to fall downwards when dropped? How are birds able to fly (and why can’t I do the same?)? Human beings have long been curious about the world in which we live, striving to identify connections among the phenomenons we witness and to understand how it all works. The field of science has developed over many centuries as a way of studying and understanding the world, beginning with the primitive stage of simply noting important regularities in nature and continuing through the rise of modern science. The modern-day sciences cover a vast range of fields, including biology, chemistry, meteorology, astronomy, physics, and much more.
Watch a diver while learning how the cerebellum helps maintain muscle tone, posture, and equilibrium
Discover the copepod's place in the marine food chain and how it develops from a larva into an adult
Study the interdependence of a cell's nucleus, ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, and Golgi apparatus
Study DNA's double helix structure to learn how the organic chemical determines an organism's traits
Study chemistry's periodic law to understand elements' properties and how they relate to one another
Know the difference between climate and weather and how the slightest climate change can impact life
Discover how the Moon's equal periods of rotation and revolution affect its orientation toward Earth
examine a variety of echinoderm species such as starfish, basket star, sand dollar, and sea cucumber
See the disruption wrought by the kudzu vine, which was introduced to the southeastern United States
Study the distinctive characteristics of the North American timber tulip tree of the magnolia family