To Know a FlyFirst published in 1962, this book by esteemed American physiologist and entomologist Vincent Dethier provides an array of helpful examples of how ingeniously controlled experiments are designed and used. Other processes of scientific inquiry are also explained, such as observation, correlation, cause and effect, gathering and interpreting data, hypothesizing, and theory building. Recommended to scientists of all ages! “...This is a superb natural history book and is highly recommended for anyone twelve or older.”—Scientific American “The author never ‘talks down’ to his readers but preserves such delightful and sparkling informal style throughout that we tend to overlook the professional skill with which he attacks his problems, the beauty of the experiments he describes. The book is such pleasant reading that we may not realize that this all represents biological research of a very high order. Among the many excellent features we may note the author’s commentaries on scientific method, which are extremely acute, informative, and provocative.”—Journal of the American Medical Association “Highly recommended enrichment reading for biology teachers and secondary students in general science or biology.—The Science Teacher |
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... body is an animated box of germs of a number and dreadfulness all out of proportion to its size. The tsetse fly transmits African sleeping sickness, a disease which in 1900 in one section of Africa killed 200,000 out of a population of ...
... body is an animated box of germs of a number and dreadfulness all out of proportion to its size. The tsetse fly transmits African sleeping sickness, a disease which in 1900 in one section of Africa killed 200,000 out of a population of ...
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... body of the caterpillar. A supply of caterpillar footsteps might command an exorbitantly high price. One of my classmates, when we were both students studying flies, solved the problem for himself by going to a local grogshop, which.
... body of the caterpillar. A supply of caterpillar footsteps might command an exorbitantly high price. One of my classmates, when we were both students studying flies, solved the problem for himself by going to a local grogshop, which.
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able activity ants archy and mehitabel bees beetles behavior biologist blood blowfly body brain cage caterpillars cells Chapter cockroach colleague creature cricket dance Dethier don marquis drink drop of sugar dung dung beetle eating Edward Lear eggs example experiment experimental animal eyes fact feathers fed fly feeding feet female flea flies fluid fly’s fucose gland Glencannon hair hand head hive honeybee hormones human hungry fly insects jump Karel Čapek kind lab coat laboratory learning legs less Lewis Carroll light live liverwurst lose water males mechanism move neck nerve never observation odor one’s operation osmotic pressure prefer preserving jar problem proboscis protein question reason removed salt satiation saucer scientific scientist sense of taste sense organ sensitive simple slices species specific hunger stock room student thing thirsty trail tube understanding Vincent Dethier Waggle Dance walk wasp wings