Web Sites for
Students
Art
| Science
| Math
| Social Studies
| Cyber Calendars
| Language Arts
Foreign
Language | Biographies
| Career &
College Information | Cool
Sites

Art
- The Archive - Over 2,300 scans from more than 230 artists. By clicking
on an artist's name, you get a collection of his work.
Web
Gallery of Art - Over 10,000 digital reproductions of European paintings
and sculptures created between the years 1150 and 1800--including commentaries
and biographies.
Guggenheim.com
- An amazing online version of the famous museum, that uses all of the
web's multimedia capabilities.
Alternative Photography
- If you're interested in 3-Dimensional pictures, Blueprints/Cyanotypes,
Fake Daguerreotypes, Gum Bichromates, and Pinhole Cameras--this site provides
procedures, processing instructions, recipes, formulas, and examples.
Pinhole Photography and Camera Design
Calculators - Everything you need to know to create a pinhole
camera: exposure charts, f stop charts, example photos, and lots of additional
links.
Handmade Photographic Images
- Detailed articles on infrared and ultraviolet photography, pinhole photography,
and alternative processes like Albumen printing, gravure prints, etc.
Science
Animals | Chemistry |
The
Environment | Geology |
Anatomy
and Health | Biology | Physics
| Plants | Space and Astronomy
| Technology | Weather | Miscellaneous
Animals
-
General
-
Sea World/Busch
Gardens - Animal Bytes - A quick and easy place to find Fast Facts
and
Fun Facts on lots of animals
-
Oakland Zoo Animals:
A to Z - Another user-friendly zoo site full of pictures and information
-
Animal Omnibus - A regularly
updated list of web sources indexed by the name of the animal. For example,
looking up African Elephant will produce a list of hyperlinks to sources
with elephant information.
-
The Electronic Zoo - A
huge list of links to information about animals.
-
Zoonet - A huge site
full of pictures, fact sheets, and links to specific animal sites.
-
exZOOberance - This
website claims to be the largest virtual zoo in the world.
-
On the Land
-
In the Sea
-
In the Air
-
Peterson Online: Birds - Field
guide with lots of links to other bird pages.
-
Bat Conservation International - Includes
bibliographies, lists of threatened bats, online research reports, and
lists of cave closures which affect the bat population. Also includes bat
facts, sounds, species lists, and images. With information on building
bat boxes and attracting bats.
-
Under the Sink
Up
to top
Chemistry
-
WebElements Periodic Table -
It's
Stanley-Approved, folks. The most up-to-date online Periodic
Table. Includes a user-friendly outline of information, as well as
audible descriptions, silly cartoons, and even some movies.
-
The Periodic Table of the Elements
- Created by an 8th grader for his science fair project, this site
includes properties, history, and uses for each element, as well as a table
of common isotopes by element.
-
Chemicool Periodic Table - A color-coded,
searchable table, with links to other similar sites. For each element,
Chemicool
contains
general information, states, energies, oxidation and electrons, appearance
and characteristics, reactions, and other forms.
Chemistry for Consumers:
-
Soap Chemistry and
Cleaning Products - It's Straushein-Approved,
folks. This data base from the Sunshine City Soapworks
provides a comparison between natural soaps and commercially manufactured
soaps and detergents.
-
ChemDex - A directory
of chemistry-related sites on the Internet. Features over 3000 categorized
links. Links are verified on a regular basis.
-
ToxFAQs™ for Cyanide
- It's Straushein-Approved, folks. Everything
you need to know about cyanide--brought to you by the government's Agency
for Toxic Substances. (Part of the Center for Disease Control.)
-
Acids
and Bases - It's Fox-Approved, folks. A
straightforward, user-friendly site from Purdue University.
-
Teaching Plastics - It's
Randall-Approved, folks. Classroom activities and information
on the history of plastics, recycling, resource conservation, food safety,
and sports.
-
American Plastics Council
- It's Randall-Approved, folks. In
addition to History and Environmental Issues, this industry website
also covers Production Statistics.
-
Macrogalleria: A Cyberwonderland
of Polymers - It's Straushein-Approved, folks.
An informal site that explores the world of large molecules--where they
are, what they are, how they work, and how to make them.
-
Large
Molecules Problem Set - It's Fox-Approved,
folks. This Arizon Univeristy Website
allows you to quiz
yourself step-by-step. If you miss an answer, you'll automatically get
a quick tutorial.
-
CD Chemfinder - A database
which includes physical property data and 2D chemical structures for chemical
compounds. Searchable by chemical name, melting point, boiling point,
molecular weight, CAS (Chemical Abstracts Service) Registry Number, and
structure. Chemfinder includes hypertext links to other Web databases
(such as MSDS, biochemistry, health, pesticide, physical property, regulatory
status, etc.) with information on the compound.
-
NIST (National Institute of
Standards) Chemistry Web Book - The Chemistry WebBook is searchable
by formula, name, partial formula, CAS registry number, molecular weight,
ionization energy, and proton affinity. Information available for each
chemical includes name, CAS registry number, molecular weight, and physical
property data. The data includes documentation on the source of the information.
Some data (such as Gas Phase IR Spectrum) best viewed with a Java-enabled
browser.
-
Yahoo's
Periodic Table Links - A searchable, quick list of links that is updated
often.
-
The Chem
Team - Tutorial for high school chemistry classes. You will also find
AP Chemistry tests from 1970 to 1996 here..
Up to top
The Environment
-
Habitats
and Biomes - This ThinkQuest site--part of The
Virtual Zoo --provides maps, photographs and clear explanations.
-
World Biomes
- Detailed information on the specific plants and animals in various biomes.
-
Biomes
- This site includes Aquatic Biomes. More words, and fewer pictures.
-
Ecological
Footprint - Are you using your share of the world's resources?
Take this online "quiz" to determine "how many planets" it would take to
sustain the world's population if everybody used as much of the world's
resources as you do.
-
Population
Growth - It's Fox-approved, folks.
Use up-to-the-minute population estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau to
model population growth and study the implications of a changing population.
-
Aquatic
Communities - A page of links that covers Rivers and Streams,
Estuaries
, Lakes and Ponds, and Oceans
-
Living Things - Links to
information on ecosystems. This is also a good place to look for information
on animals, plants, and biology in general.
-
Trends: a Compendium
of Data on Global Change - Features data on atmospheric carbon dioxide,
consumption of fossil fuels, long term climate records, atmospheric aerosols,
terrestrial carbon content and impact of land use on carbon fluxes. The
data is presented by site, region or emission type. Includes graphs and
digital data, available for download.
-
Global
Warming Facts and Our Future - In this exhibition, the National Academies
provide scientific information to help us make informed decisions and to
help answer some important questions. Sections cover The Greenhouse Effect
, Carbon Cycle, Causes of Change, Past Change, Predicted Change, Impacts
of Change, and Responses to Change.
- Earth from Space - Images
of earth taken by space shuttle missions grouped into: cities, earth landscapes,
earth-human interactions, distinctive features, geographic regions, weather
and hurricanes, and water habitats.
- Bagheer: A Website for Our Endangered
Species - A visually exciting site which collects information about
endangered species: animal profiles, legal actions, interviews with environmentalists,
etc.o lists, legislation, and protection efforts.
-
Endangered Species
list - From the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Endangered species are
listed by state.
- The Rainforest Action Network - Lots
of information on rainforests and what you can do to help preserve them.
- TOXNET (Toxicology Data Network)
- A searchable database of information on hazardous chemicals, sponsored
by the National Library of Medicine
- Energy Quest - A huge site
maintained by the California Energy Commission. A one-stop site for research
on energy conservation.
- Desert USA - Information
about American deserts including plants, animals, and Native Americans
who live in the desert.
Up
to top
Geology
-
Geology Labs On-Line -
Web-based lab activities from California State University that provide
interactive "virtual" labs on such topics as earthquakes, carbon dating,
and floods--with more labs being added all the time.
-
Earthquake Information - General
information from the US Geological Survey.
-
National
Earthquake Information Center: Near-Real-Time Earthquake Bulletin -
Up-to-the-minute information from the US Geological Survey
-
Earth from Space - Images
of earth taken by space shuttle missions grouped into: cities, earth landscapes,
earth-human interactions, distinctive features, geographic regions, weather
and hurricanes, and water habitats
-
Locations of the latest
earthquakes - Complete with maps
-
The Electronic Volcano
- Pictures, maps, and reports on current volcano activity.
-
Mineral gallery - If you need
information on minerals, this is a good place to start.
Up
to top
Human Anatomy
and Health
-
Anatomy Sites
-
Inner Body System
Select - It's Straushein-Approved, folks.
Detailed images, descriptions and animations of ten human body systems
are just a click a way.
-
BBC
Online - Science - Human Body - It's Fox-Approved,
folks. Clear illustrations, and easily
interlinked explanations of all the major organs and body systems.
-
A
Guide to Brain Anatomy - It's Straushein-Approved,
folks. Straightforward descriptions
and illustrations, including associated behaviors and potential injuries.
-
Explore
the Brain and Spinal Cord - It's
Straushein-Approved, folks. Comprehensive
coverage in simple language, with a user-friendly interface.
-
Comparative
Mammalian Brain Collections - It's
Straushein-Approved, folks. Images
and information from "The Brain Museum" at the University of Wisconsin.
Viewers can see and download photographs of brains from over 100 different
species of mammals (including humans) representing 17 mammalian orders.
-
Brain Explorer
- It's Straushein-Approved, folks.
A glossary, a gallery, an atlas--plus a focus on brain disorders. (Beware:
this site requires an up-to-date browser.)
-
Gray's Anatomy - The classic
is now online. Beautiful illustrations, searchable by keyword.
- E Skeletons - View the bones of
the human anatomy from different angles in clear, detailed images, and
then compare them with the bones of a chimpanzee or a a baboon.
-
Nutrition
Analysis Tool - It's Randall-Approved,
folks. This University of Illinois
website lets you enter the specific foods you've eaten, and then analyzes
their nutritional content.
- NutritionData
- A quick, easy way to find out what's good and bad about the foods you
eat--especially those popular fast foods. Search their database of food
composition data, and receive a concise nutritional analysis of each selected
food. Information is easy to find, and clearly-presented.
- Food Finder
- Compare the fat, calories, sodium and cholesterol of your favorite fast
food. Created using data from the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office,
this site will show whether you are what you eat:
- Images from the History of Medicine
- A searchable database of over 60,000 images illustrating the history
of medicine. Although viewable online, many of the images are bisected
by a thin diagonal line to encourage the user to purchase a digital copy
from the National Library of Medicine.
-
From
Quackery to Bacteriology: The Emergence of Modern Medicine in 19th Century
America - A history of medicine which includes sections on scientific
medicine, alternative medicine, women's health, public health, nutrition,
and other topics. Illustrated.
-
Disease Information Sites
-
The World Health Organization
- An international overview of infectious diseases, non-communicable diseases,
environment issues relating to disease, reproductive health issues, and
health statistics
-
Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention - "In the News," "Travelers Health," and "Health
Topics A-Z" are the major features of this website.
-
Alphabetic
List of Specific Diseases/Disorders - A huge list that's not well-organized,
but still worth digging through.
-
FluNet - (Global Influenza
Surveillance Network) It's Straushein-Approved,
folks. A very detailed site, providing current information
including news, maps, charts, and tables. (A partner site with the World
Health Organization)
-
Your Genes, Your Health: A Multimedia
Guide to Genetic Disorders - Part of the Cold Spring Harbor Lab, this
site has animated explanations of the major genetic disorders, such as
Sickle Cell Disease, Cystic Fibrosis, Hemophelia, Neurofibromatosis, and
Huntington Disease.
-
MedLine Plus
- Part of the National Library of Medicine. Provides links to sites on
common diseases and conditions, an online medical dictionary, and current
articles on health issues.
-
Healthfinder - A gateway to
health information provided by the Department of Health and Human Services.
It covers more than 1000 topics, and restricts its links only to government
and nonprofit agencies whose contents have been screened for quality.
It includes a Spanish section.
-
Yahoo! -
Health: Diseases and Conditions - A huge, alphabetized list of diseases.
Click on a disease name, and you'll get a list of websites that deal with
it.
-
Whole Brain Atlas
- Includes sections on the normal brain, significant brain structures,
aging, neurovascular disease, neoplastic disease, degenerative disease,
inflammatory, and infectious diseases of the brain. Most images accompanied
by descriptive material. Includes links to a primer on neuro-imaging.
-
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
-
Infertility Treatments
- Part of the Internet Health Resources WebSite. Provides treatment overviews,
and answers to frequently asked questions.
-
Dr. Derman's Infertility
Home Page - Causes, drugs, surgical procedures, treatments, links to
other fertility resources on the web--all with clear illustrations.
-
The Keirsey
Temperament Sorter II - This site lets you take a shortened version
of the Meyers-Briggs personality profile online.
-
Reality
Bytes: Info About Things That Matter - Honest and appropriate information
on relationships and teen pregnancy from the Multnomah (Oregon) Public
Library.
-
iEmily: Health and Wellness for Girls
- A comprehensive site with over 300 articles on subjects such as substance
abuse, sexually transmitted diseases and birth control, domestic violence,
nutrition, exercise, depression and stress. All content is professionally
written and reviewed by board-certified physicians to ensure that only
the most accurate information is posted on the site.
Up
to top
Biology
Dissection
| Genetics
| Molecular
Biology
Virtual Dissection Websites
-
Squid
Dissection - The Smithsonian Institution's National Museum
of Natural History overview of the dissection process includes labeled
diagrams, and step-by-step dissection instructions.
-
The Interactive
Frog Dissection - With step-by-step instructions and pictures,
as well as overview movies, this site is the next best thing to being in
the lab with a scalpel in your hand.
-
Virtual
Frog Dissection Kit - The froggy can be rotated, flipped on its back,
skinned, enlarged, or edited so you only see the organs and systems you
want. You can even make a movie! It ain't easy
being green...
-
Virtual
Fetal Pig Dissection - Study Guides, Interactive Quizes, and step-by-step
illustrated descriptions to guide you through the process.
-
The
Virtual Pig Dissection - Step-by-step labeled diagrams show you the
anatomy of a fetal pig, arranged by circulatory system, respiratory
system, digestive system, and reproductive system. Click on the organ
names for explanations of their functions.
-
Genetics Sites
-
Kimball's
Biology Pages - It's Swinnerton-Approved,
folks. This site lets you search
by topic, and gives clear, illustrated examples--complete with hyperlinks
to related topics.
-
Genetic
Disorders and Birth Defects - A mammoth site full of disease overviews
and links to resource associations.
-
Genetic
Science Learning Center - Hundreds of hands-on activities on every
genetic topic imaginable. From the University of Utah.
-
Your Genes, Your Health: A Multimedia
Guide to Genetic Disorders - Part of the Cold
Spring Harbor Lab, this site has animated explanations of the
major genetic disorders, such as Sickle Cell Disease, Cystic Fibrosis,
Hemophelia, Neurofibromatosis, and Huntington Disease.
-
Evolution
- It's Fox-Approved, folks. A
companion website to the PBS series, loaded with Shockwave animations that
clearly illustrate every aspect of this topic.
-
The DNA Learning Center - Gene Almanac
- This
Cold
Spring Harbor Lab site includes animation sequences as well
as genetic databases where you can enter your own genetic information to
do Hardy-Weinberg population calculations. While you're in the neighborhood,
check out DNA From The Beginning
- A multimedia primer on the basics of DNA and heredity that's more complete
than most textbooks.
-
Genetic Science Learning Center
- A
terrific introduction to all the ways that genetics affect our lives and
society from the University of Utah Eccles Institute
-
Human Genome
Program , a fifteen year project to identify all of the 50,000 human
genes. See the Human Genome Project
Information page for history, ethical issues, and other information
on the project. With links to other genetics resources, educational materials,
and links to the more technical
research
page which includes abstracts of completed research and other information.
-
Gene Map of the Human
Genome - The map includes a list of featured genes (known to cause
illnesses such as Huntington's or cystic fibrosis), a glossary of terms,
a browse by chromosome, and links to research databases.
-
Genome Database - Hosted by Johns
Hopkins University, in support of the Human Genome Project, the
database has simple and advanced search interfaces. The database contains:
regions of the human genome, including genes, clones, amplimers (PCR markers),
breakpoints, cytogenetic markers, fragile sites. ESTs, syndromic regions,
contigs and repeats. Maps of the human genome, including cytogenetic maps,
linkage maps, radiation hybrid maps, content contig maps, and integrated
maps. These maps can be displayed graphically via the Web. Variations within
the human genome including mutations and polymorphisms, plus allele frequency
data.
-
The site includes extensive links to other sites in the Human Genome
Project and online reports. Where applicable, the reports include maps,
and links to Online Mendelian
Inheritance In Man (OMIM) OMIM , a database of human genes and genetic
disorders, contains detailed descriptions, pictures, and additional references.
It also contains lots of links to NCBI's
Entrez database of MEDLINE articles and sequence information.
Molecular Biology Sites
-
Kimball's
Biology Pages - It's Swinnerton-Approved,
folks. This site lets you search by
topic, and gives clear, illustrated examples--complete with hyperlinks
to related topics.
-
Beginner's
Guide to Molecular Biology - It's Fox-Approved,
folks. Easy to follow, with terrific illustrations.
-
Microscopy Primer:
Introduction to Microscopy - Everything you ever needed to know about microscopes:
Light and Color, Parts, Techniques, History, and "Virtual Microscopy."
- ChickScope: Exploring Embryology
- It's Straushein-Approved, folks. A
huge site from the University of Illinois that includes photos, video clips,
notes and observations--and some really bad chicken jokes.
- The Visible Embryo
- It's Straushein-Approved, folks.
Allows
the viewer to navigate through the 40 weeks of a pregnancy, providing
detailed illustrations and explanations of each unique stage of human development.
Includes a terrific glossary and list of links
-
The Microbe Zoo
- Here's where you'll discover the world of
invisible critters that live on us and in us. Everybody needs to
know what
Methanobacterium
smithii is!
- Molecular Expressions:
Images from the Microscope - Includes beautiful color images of cholesterol,
beer, DNA, fatty acids, buckyballs, computer parts, and more. Each image
includes a descriptive caption. With information on optical microscopy.
-
Tree of Life
- The Tree "is a project designed to contain information about the phylogenetic
relationships and characteristics of organisms, to illustrate the diversity
and unity of living organisms, and to link biological information available
on the Internet in the form of a phylogenetic navigator."
-
Dictionary of
Cell Biology - First published in 1989, the second edition (1995) is
now available on the web and in print. The second edition is searchable
or browsable via a graphical interface which groups terms into very broad
categories (diseases, mitochondria, transport). Covering terms encountered
in biology literature, it includes 5450 entries and 5772 cross-references.
New entries slated for inclusion in the third print edition are now available
in the Web second edition.
Up to top
Plants
-
Colorado
State Cooperative Extension Garden Publications - Use this site to find fact sheets
on basic gardening tips, diseases, flowers & shrubs, fruits & vegetables,
and trees & shrubs.
-
Gardening.com - Includes a plant
encylopedia, links to Internet gardening sites, and a problem solver to
identify common gardening problems.
-
PlantFacts - A fact sheet
database and a plant dictionary, searchable by name, category, feature,
or pest. Information from 46
different colleges, universities, and government institutions across the
U.S. and Canada.
(If you're looking for garden pests, this is
the site to try first.)
-
A Survey
of the Plant Kingdom - All plants listed by kingdom.
Nice pictures.
-
Plants National Database - A USDA
service with provides standardized plant names, symbols and other plant
attribute information--distribution maps, bibliographic citations and other
information.
-
Families of
Flowering Plants: Descriptions, Illustrations, Identification, and Information
Retrieval - Includes information on the habit and leaf form,anatomy,
reproductive type, seed morphology, geographic distribution, physiology
and biochemistry,economic uses, and taxonomy of flowering plants. Illustrated.
-
Wildflowers - Links to extensive
photographs, and other sites related to botany.
-
Flowerbase - A database from Holland
which has over 7000 images of flowers and garden plants. Searchable by
botanical name or number, or common name in English. To
use it, click on Menu, then click on Flowerbase.
-
Cornell University Poisonous
Plants Web - A developing resource on poisonous plants. Arranged by
genus and species, type of toxin, and animals affected. Although not yet
complete, the database includes description, distinguishing characteristics,
distribution, symptoms of poisoning, prevention, and references. With links
to related resources.
Up to top
Physics
The Physics of Sports
(They're
Fox-Approved, folks.)
Science
of Baseball: Thrown for a Curve - Here's the physics behind all those
pitches we can't hit.
Science of
Hockey - Discover the physics of saves, slapshots, body checks, and
the ice skating itself.
How
the Physics of Football Works - Passing, Punting, Running, Tackling--this
site covers it all.
-
Mr. Owens's
AP Physics Class Website - It's all here, folks--every brain-busting
topic you'll cover. Definitions, explanations, illustrations, related links,
and pretests--all the support materials you need to succeed in The Little
Professor's class.
-
Physics Around the World
- A comprehensive index to physics sites. Browsable and searchable. Includes
annotations.
-
Soda Constructor
- An amazing two-dimensional erector set, using springs and vectors.
Choose a ready-made shape, or create your own, then put it into motion,
take away gravity, speed it up, and more.
-
The
Little Shop of Physics: Online Physics Experiments - Colorado State
University lets you choose from experiments using common household items,
experiments you can do with your computer, or Shockwave experiments
(requiring the Shockwave plugin that works with your browser). Demonstrate
Bernoulli's principle or find out how those annoying sounds are generated
for the Emergency Broadcast System.
-
How Things Work - This
site contains a series of short essay answers to questions posed over the
web. The questions and their answers can be searched or browsed via a topical
index. Louis A. Bloomfield, a professor of physics, has grouped the questions
and answers into an index which corresponds to his print work How Things
Work: The Physics of Everyday Life.
-
The Physics Zone
- If you don't get it unless you see it in action, this site is for you.
Simulations galore of every aspect of physics.
- A Virtual Nuclear Power Plant
Tour - This site offers pictures, diagrams, comparisons to other types
of energy, and links to other databses with statistics about energy.
It includes information abut nuclear waste, power plant impact on global
warming, and radiation safety.
Up to top
Space and Astronomy
Information on Current Space
Programs and Astronomy Events
-
Today@NASA
- Daily news from NASA..
-
Tonight's Sky at
the Skywatching Center - Star charts and planet locations for the current
month. Each day's segment is designed to guide your eye to something you
can see that night, or the next morning before dawn. It might be a constellation,
a star, or a planet. Or it might be a celestial event, such as an eclipse.
-
Your Sky Interactive
Planetarium - To make a sky map, just enter the latitude and longitude
of your observing site or select from a list of cities. Press the "Make
Sky Map" button andYour Sky will deliver a map showing the sky above
the location you specified at the current time.
Mars Exploration
- 2001Mars Odyssey
- from NASA
-
Life on
Mars - This is the CNN site and it offers a lot more information than
NASA does. There are links to other pages about Mars, and even links to
science fiction pages.
- Mars Network - Gateway to the
Mars Frontier - A NASA site describing a proposed communication and navigation
infrastructure at Mars
Jupiter
- Project Galileo : Bringing Jupiter
to Earth - Use this great site to follow the exploration of Jupiter
and its moons.
The Hubble Space Telescope
-
Hubble Space Telescope
Public Pictures - Includes the whimsically-named
HST's
Greatest Hits 1991-1995 --absolutely phenomenal images taken by Hubble.
Displayed as thumbnail images with links to the larger image in .gif ,
.tiff or .jpg format. Most images include a descriptive caption.
-
Hubble Images
of the Planet Pluto
Other Space Exploration Missions
- The Lunar Prospector - Set for
launch in October, 1997, this satellite will circle the moon for one year
looking for polar water and for minerals which could be used for building
a lunar base or for fuel for future missions which would be launched from
the moon.
Other Information on Space
- The National Air and Space Agency -
Links to all of NASA's sites on the web.
- Mike's Spacecraft
Library - Information about all types of spacecraft and satellites
from all countries.
-
Satellites
- Learn the what, why and how of man-made satellites, then build one of
three Java-based satellites with the interactive construction sets. Includes
information about Communications, Earth Remote Sensing, Weather, Global
Positioning, and gallery lesson plans. From the Tech Museum of Innovation
in San Jose, California.
Astronomy
- Amazing Space: Education On-Line
from the Hubble Space Telescope - These interactive lessons from the
Space
Telescope Science Institute include spectacular photographs taken by
the Hubble Space Telescope and lots of graphics, videos, and animations.
- Astronomy for Kids
- A easy-to-understand site that's full of useful information. Don't miss
Sky
Facts and Sky Maps.
-
SkyView: The
Internet's Virtual Telescope - Skyview is able to generate images of
any portion of the sky in wavelengths from radio to gamma ray. Users select
the position, scale and orientation desired. Skyview will generate an image
and companion FITS data which can be viewed on screen or saved to disk.
With simple and advanced interfaces, including a relatively simple page
for non-astronomers.
- Earth from Space - Images
of earth taken by space shuttle missions grouped into: cities, earth landscapes,
earth-human interactions, distinctive features, geographic regions, weather
and hurricanes, and water habitats.
- Welcome to the Planets -
NASA's website. Includes a collection of images produced by NASA space
missions. With up-to-date planet profiles (size, velocity, density, rotation
around the sun, surface composition), images, and descriptive text.
- Solar System Simulator - "The
Solar System Simulator originated as JPL's SPACE software package,
which consisted of a set of computer graphics programs designed to simulate
spacecraft trajectories and produce various photographic and video products.
The SPACE package was specifically designed for animating space missions
and was uniquely suited to JPL mission design." Choose the body of the
solar system you wish to view, the body of the solar system you wish to
view it from, a date from 1970-2010, and a time. The simulator will create
a .jpg format image which can be viewed online or saved to disk. (A part
of Space Library which includes
NASA space art, star and planet surface maps, and more.)
- Your Sky - This program
lets you choose a nearby city, or enter your latitude and longitude to
find out what is in the sky presently. Easy-to-use controls let you
manipulate the data to find a star map for the next night, or the next
week.
-
Stars and
Constellations - Great sky maps and photographs
-
Star
Journey - Sky chart from the National Geographic magazine.
-
Astronomy Picture
of the Day - A new picture every day along with a brief description
written by an astronomer.
-
The Observatorium
- A NASA site that provides a virtual tour of the sky and earth. The "Image
Gallery" shows all U.S. capital cities as they appear from space.
- The Astronomical Images Library
-
Black Holes
and Neutron Stars - A good, understandable explanation of what they
are and how we find them.
Up to top
Technology
CIAC Internet Hoaxes
- A site maintained by the Department of Energy that provides up-to-date
information virus hoaxes, as well as actual email viruses,
chain letters, and other potential web problems
Search Dictionary of
PC Hardware and Data Comm. Terms - This dictionary provides complete
descriptions of complex terms dealing with personal computers and networks.
It contains up-to-date information about everything from a common item
like "batteries" to an obscure font technology called "Speedo."
Totally Drivers - Help is here
for those of you always looking for the right drivers. In just two
clicks, you can be on the website for the brand of driver you need. Includes
browser update links and plugin links, too.
Xenu - Visit
this site to download a free program called Xenu Link Sleuth. It
checks all the links on your web pages and generates a nice clean report
of which links have coasted off down Interstate 404.
Search Engine Watch - Overviews
of the major search engines, reviews, tutorials, and insights into search
engine technology, trivia and interesting facts.
CoolText.com - A free online
service which will create graphics customized exactly the way you want
them.
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Weather
-
Rain or Shine Weather - Five
day weather forecasts for 800 cities worldwide plus weather maps for the
United States.
-
AMS The DataStreme Project
- Updated every two hours by the American Meteorological Society, this
site gives you all the data you need to make accurate weather predictions.
You can see the current maps of fronts, water vapor, upper air currents,
and infrared imaging that the TV stations use.
-
El Nino Theme
Page - Includes basic information, frequently asked questions, links
to Spanish and Portuguese sites, forecasts, data, reports on the economic
impacts of El Nino and more.
- Bibliography of the Effects
of El Niño on the United States -This site provides an extensive
list of books and articles which deal with El Nino's impact on agriculture,
climate, drought, fire, flood, natural gas, precipitation, tornadoes, snow,
streamflow, etc.
-
The 1997 El Nino
Southern Oscillation - This site contains direct links to articles
from various sources and reports from many locations throughout the world.
-
Online
Guides - Richly illustrated instructional materials on meteorology,
climate, remote sensing and global change provided by the University of
Illinois Weather Machine. With projects and activities. Features both text-based
and graphic interfaces.
- The Weather Channel - Current weather
forecasts.
- The Tornado Project Online
- Lots of information about tornados.
- Weather Science Hotlist
- Links to many weather web sites.
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Miscellaneous
-
Science Fair Stuff
-
The Exploratorium Science
Snacks - The Exploratorium Science Snackbooks show how to build miniature
science exhibits with inexpensive, easily available materials. This online
resource includes 107 "snacks," each with instructions, advice, helpful
hints, and explanations of the science involved.
-
Internet Public Library's
Science Fair Project Guide - Of all the science fair sites, this one's
the most complete and up-to-date. Full of ideas, resources, and sample
projects.
-
The Exploratorium
Online Exhibits - Optical Illusions Galore!
It's deLemos-Approved, folks.
-
Microscopy Primer:
Introduction to Microscopy - Everything you ever needed to know about microscopes:
Light and Color, Parts, Techniques, History, and "Virtual Microscopy."
-
Bill Nye the Science Guy - The web site
is almost as good as the TV show. Experiments, puzzles, quizzes, links,
and a new science demo every day.
-
Bad Science
and Bad
Meteorology - Prof. Alistair B. Fraser maintains both pages "in an
attempt to sensitize teachers and students to examples of the bad science
often taught in schools, universities, and offered in popular articles
and even textbooks." The site provides examples of "bad science" and explains
why they are wrong.
-
The Why Files - Current
events in science. Find out the science behind the headlines.
-
How Stuff Works - From car
engines to cruise missiles, from toilets to television sets--this is a
treasure trove of answers to how all the technology we live with--or can't
live without--works.
-
Molecular Expressions:
Images from the Microscope - Includes beautiful color images of cholesterol,
beer, DNA, fatty acids, buckyballs, computer parts, and more. Each image
includes a descriptive caption. With information on optical microscopy.
-
Invention Dimension - A site maintained
by MIT that allows you to search for inventors or inventions. Click on
the "Inventor of the Week Archives."
-
The Keirsey
Temperament Sorter II - This site lets you take a shortened version
of the Meyers-Briggs personality profile online.
-
The Faces
of Science: African Americans in the Sciences - This site features
short biographies of African American scientists from all scientific disciplines.
Each illustrated biography includes a bibliography of works by and about
the scientist, a list of patents received, and other information. The site
also includes statistics about the number of doctoral degrees awarded to
African Americans in scientific disciplines.
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Mathematics
-
To see the beauty of math, take a look at these McAtee-approved
sites on CONIC SECTIONS:
-
If you're all finished with your assignment, have some fun at these
sites
-
Cool
Math Sites - A hotlist of various math websites. Don’t just go
to the Puzzles and Teasers at the top of the page. There are categories
for Algebra, Geometry, and Calculus, too. Find online calculators,
raw data to manipulate, and information about the history of Mathematics.
-
National
Library of Virtual Manipulatives - A site maintained
by Utah State University that provides puzzles and activities--grouped
by grade level--covering the areas of Numbers & Operations,
Algebra, Geometry, Measurement, and Data Analysis & Probability.
- Brain Teasers - Some
of the best math and logic problems for kids on the Net. New teasers are
posted each week by grade level.
- The Math Forum: Student
Center - Problems, puzzles, contests, tips & tricks, and chat areas.
- Ask Dr. Math - Problem
you can't solve? Submit it to Dr. Math, but check the archives first to
see if it has already been answered.
- King's Math - This
hotlist organizes math categories, then links you directly to webpages
that have a tool or game to meet that need. From Beginning Math activities
to Probability, this site links to activities from all over the globe.
-
Calculators
On-line - Here you can do all those conversions for problems like temperature
and distance.
- Dave's Math Tables
- Available in English or Spanish, includes math tables for general math,
algebra, geometry, trigonometry, calculus, statistics, and "odds and ends".
Includes a glossary of math terms.
-
VassarStats"
Website for Statistical Computation - If you are taking a statistics
course, or integrating statistics into your class, this is a gold mine.
-
On-Line Mathematics
Dictionary - Definitions from Abundant Number to Zeta Function.
-
Chaos Experience
- Includes a history and overview of chaos theory,descriptions of chaos
in everyday life, animated fractals, a glossary of terms, downloadable
images and applications.
- Manipula Math with
Java - This Japanese website is loaded with interactive programs that
you can manipulate, and animations that help you to grasp the meaning
of mathematical ideas.
-
The
Mandelbrot Set - This site was created to help people understand where
the Mandelbrot Set comes from.
- The Spanky Fractal Database - Make
beautiful pictures with mathematics. A must-see!
-
History
of Mathematics Web Resources - Includes time lines, regional mathematics,
links to related resources, and bibliographies. Includes links to the
MacTutor
History of Mathematics archive, which includes biographies for over
1,000 mathematicians, grouped by name, birthplace, and era. The site also
includes numerous chronologies, articles on the history of math, an index
of famous curves, bibliographies, and links to related resources.
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Updated May/05