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Pacific Science Center includes six acres of hands-on science fun, two IMAX theaters, Tropical Butterfly House, Live Science Stage shows, Discovery Carts, Laser Dome and much more.
Confronting Mortality with Art and Science Conference, Antwerp.
Of or related to the Morbid Anatomy blog.
Science World and its reflection in False Creek.
More and hi-resolution images available at my website www.creativescans.com/
Science Cosmos offer the best Lego robotics, Lego science and game programming classes and camps for kids in Ashburn, Chantilly VA. Choose a Location and book an appointment!! Science Cosmos is a fun learning program, where children develop an interest in science, technology and engineering.
Contact US:
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Science Cosmos
14120 Parke Long Court, Suite 113
Chantilly
Virginia
20151
An exterior night view of Science World at the Telus World of Science, with the building reflecting off the waters of False Creek. (Vancouver, BC, Canada)
Science Saturday at Springville Road welcomes Benjamin Franklin.
Learn more about Benjamin Franklin at the Benjamin Franklin: In Search of a Better World exhibition and visit us for the many library events about one of best known Founding Fathers.
An evening of combustible vapours, free thinking and fizzy drinks as part of the British Science Festival 2014.
Organised by Flatpack Film Festival, this event was inspired by Joseph Priestley and took place at the Birmingham & Midland Institute on 6 September 2014.
All images by Jack Spicer Adams.
Headquarters Library
Storm the Castle! Build Your Own Catapult
NC Science Festival
April 14, 2012
a look down the firing line
The "Rice: research to production" course, held for the second time on 19 May-6 June at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI), brought together 29 participants from 13 countries across the developed and developing world.
The participants included undergraduate and graduate students and post-doctoral fellows from developed countries such as Canada, Japan, Korea, the United Kingdom, and the United States, and scientists from developing countries such as Bangladesh, Indonesia, Mozambique, Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Tanzania. Sponsored by the National Science Foundation in the United States, the Gatsby Foundation in the United Kingdom, and IRRI, the course also seeks to reverse the one-way traffic of recent decades that has seen thousands of young scientists from the developing world studying and then taking jobs in the developed world.
Students from the developed countries, many of whom had never set foot in a rice field before, began to understand the challenges rice farmers face in simply trying to grow enough food to feed themselves and their families.
Part of the image collection of the International Rice Research Institute.