By Roland Piquepaille
This is the third year that Scientific American gives these awards. This is a collection of 50 sites which have something really neat to offer: science. Here is the introduction.It's a jungle out there. With more than three billion Web pages to sift through, finding great science sites is harder than ever. The good news is the editors at Scientific American have once again trawled the Internet for the best the Web has to offer. We think our list of winners has something for everyone..
These 50 sites are classified in ten categories:
- Anthropology & Paleontology
- Astronomy & Astrophysics
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Earth & Environment
- Engineering & Technology
- Great Minds
- Mathematics
- Medicine
- Physics
Here are my four favorite sites:
- Great Archaeological Sites
Curated by the French Ministry of Culture and Communication, this collection of web sites offers such wonders as a visit to the painted cave of Lascaux, virtual reconstruction of 450,000-year-old Tautavel Man and tutorials on shipwreck excavation. Explore archeological sites dating from prehistory to the Middle Ages, all searchable by period and geography, and most available in both English and French. Although decidedly stronger in French locales than elsewhere, each interactive adventure is a treat, accompanied by stunning photographs and meticulously detailed timelines, diagrams and textual explanations.
- Exploring Mars
Get ready: You're about to join the Diomedes Mission, the first to put humans on the surface of the Red Planet. You'll be oohing and aaahing in 3-D as you explore the Mars Base, right down to the wall-mounted LCD screens, medical facilities and even the space habitat's privies. With the aid of advanced technology, you'll take a self-guided tour, tread the Kevlar floor of the Base's laboratory, witness the deployment of a robot rover and even fling open the hatches to take a gander at the vast vermilion vista of the planet's surface.
- Earth As Art
In Australia, it looks like Monet's Water Lilies seen through a rain-splashed window; in Alaska, it's the vivid fire and ice of a Santana album cover. "It" is the Earth, and this NASA-sponsored site showcases snapshots of our Mother Planet not just from a scientific perspective, but from an aesthetic one. Often, satellite photos of Earth, although fascinating, can be a bit dull (they don't call them "earth tones" for nothing). Here, however, wavelengths of light captured by the Landsat-7 satellite
Famous quotes containing the word web:
“The soul knows only the soul; the web of events is the flowing robe in which she is clothed.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
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