The Amazing Facts Range is full of compelling factual information about this incredible continent, from its early settlement and culture, to its megafauna, mammals, European arrival and starlit southern skies. Collect all books in this stunning series to learn more about Australia's unique people, land and wildlife, and its past and present.
The Amazing Facts Range is full of compelling factual information about this incredible continent, from its early settlement and culture, to its megafauna, mammals, European arrival and starlit southern skies. Collect all books in this stunning series to learn more about Australia's unique people, land and wildlife, and its past and present.
The Amazing Facts Range is full of compelling factual information about this incredible continent, from its early settlement and culture, to its megafauna, mammals, European arrival and starlit southern skies. Collect all books in this stunning series to learn more about Australia's unique people, land and wildlife, and its past and present.
2003 marks the centenary of powered flight with the Wright brothers' flight in 1903. This visual celebration of aviation history in Australia depicts the wonderful ways in which aviation has brought change to rural areas and the way we travel the expanse of our great continent.
The Amazing Facts Range is full of compelling factual information about this incredible continent, from its early settlement and culture, to its megafauna, mammals, European arrival and starlit southern skies. Collect all books in this stunning series to learn more about Australia's unique people, land and wildlife, and its past and present.
The Amazing Facts Range is full of compelling factual information about this incredible continent, from its early settlement and culture, to its megafauna, mammals, European arrival and starlit southern skies. Collect all books in this stunning series to learn more about Australia's unique people, land and wildlife, and its past and present.
Beyond Southern Skies tells the story of the planning and construction of the Parkes Telescope in rural New South Wales, Australia and surveys its achievements over the past thirty years. Around this central theme Peter Robertson presents a broader history of radio astronomy, describing its rapid rise to become the respected partner of traditional optical astronomy. The opening up of the radio window on the universe has been one of the most exciting developments in modern science. The technical achievements of the telescope outlined in Peter Robertson's very readable book will be accessible to a general audience. Readers will be fascinated by the lively account of the personalities, politics and controversy that lay behind the decision to build the Parkes Telescope. Since its completion in 1961, the telescope has contributed much to our knowledge of quasars, pulsars, masers, supernova remnants and molecular clouds, as well as the other unusual objects discovered in recent years. During the 1990s the telescope will continue to play a part in our quest to understand the origin and nature of the universe, and our place in it.
It is rare for a complete biography of an Australian scientist, particularly of an Australian woman scientist, to be published. It is rarer for such a book to be co-authored by an American. Although scientists have written discourses on the history of their discipline, it is most unusual for a scientist to write a full length biography of a colleague in his ?eld. It is also uncommon for a man to write about an Australian woman scientist; most of the work on Australian women scientists has been done by other women. However, these authors, both distinguished researchers in the ?eld of radio astr- omy, became so interested in the history of their discipline and in the career of the pioneer radio astronomer Ruby Payne-Scott that they spent some years bringing this book to fruition. Until relatively recently, Ruby Payne-Scott had been the only woman scientist mentioned brie?y in histories of Australian science or of Australian radio astronomy. This book will be an invaluable resource for anyone interested in these disciplines. Being scientists themselves, the authors explain Payne-Scott’s scienti?c work in detail; therefore, the value and importance of her contributions can, for the ?rst time, be recognised, not only by historians but also by scientists.