http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/index-n.html
The first stop on the tour is NASA's Humans in Space site. Designed to prepare visitors for the rigors of space travel, this site may give you a start. The good news is that microgravity allows you to turn somersaults in midair or lift a 300-pound weight with a pinkie. If you're ready for adventure, continue on to the next Web site.
http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov
Next stop: Mars. At NASA's Planetary Photojournal Web site, you can take a quick jaunt to the Red Planet. Click on Mars to see the startling images of the Martian surface taken during the recent Pathfinder Mission. Take a look at Cabbage Patch, an area studded with small rounded objects that may have been left behind by a Martian flood. Don't forget to visit
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NASA's Planetary Photojournal Web site |
After you've flipped through the snapshots of Mars, gaze at the icy moons of Saturn taken during the Voyager mission or pull over for a vista of the solar system.
Along with inspiring pictures, NASA's Web site is a trove of detailed scientific information collected during a variety of space missions.
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu
Now take off your space suit and head to Earth for an online tour back in time, courtesy of the University of California Museum of Paleontology. Time travelers can click on dinosaur tracks to learn about Earth and the creatures that inhabited it millions of years ago.
Intrepid souls who thrilled to the story of
This site contains other virtual museum exhibits, including one on elephants, another on plate tectonics, and a gallery of fossil images.
http://www.chemcenter.org
Fast-forward to present-day Earth for a tour of ChemCenter, a site sponsored by the American Chemical Society. Head for National Chemistry Week to find out how to become a chemist for a day. Scientists are recruiting volunteers to collect and test natural water samples across the
Need some chemical humor? The society has compiled a list of jokes sent in by Web surfers. Have you heard the one about the two atoms?
http://pearl1.lanl.gov/periodic/
If you want to learn more about argon, lead, and the other elements, go to the online Periodic Table of the Elements, a site hosted by the Los Alamos National Laboratory. Click on any element in the table to get an array of information about its history, properties, and uses. For example, here you'll learn that sodium is the fourth most abundant element on Earth.
http://volcanoes.usgs.gov
For more travel adventure, peer over the rim of a virtual volcano designed by the U.S. Geological Survey Volcano Hazards Program. This site includes detailed information about the hazards posed by volcanoes and reports on volcanic unrest around the world. It includes dramatic volcano footage, including a picture of a spatter cone, a steep hill of welded lava erupting on the Big Island of Hawaii. Don't get dizzy as you look down into the Aniakchak caldera in
http://www.goes.noaa.gov
For an unparalleled view of forest fires and other natural disasters, head for the Geostationary Satellite site run by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It has data on cloud and surface conditions collected by satellites orbiting Earth. You can look at a satellite image of the forest fires in
http://www.elnino.noaa.gov
The latest data on El Niño, the occasional warming of
http://ParticleAdventure.org
For a trip to the subatomic world, visit the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Particle Data Group's site. Here, you can embark on the Particle Adventure. Learn about the inner workings of atoms, including a strange family of particles called quarks, which have names like up, down, and charm. If this introduction to physics sounds like a Dr. Seuss book, read on. During the adventure, you'll meet leptons and the elusive neutrinos.
http://www.utm.edu/research/primes
Math buffs will enjoy the Prime Page, a site devoted entirely to -- you guessed it -- prime numbers. Run by mathematician Chris K. Caldwell at the
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk:80/~history
For the personal side of mathematics, visit a Web site sponsored by the
http://www.reef.edu.au (No longer available.)
Don your diving gear for a trip to an ocean reef. Developed by the
http://commtechlab.msu.edu/sites/dlc-me/zoo
Hop onto the shuttle bus for the Microbe Zoo, a site developed by the Communication Technology Laboratory at
http://www.hhmi.org/GeneticTrail/
To catch up on the fast-paced field of genetics, tap into the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Web site. Blazing a Genetic Trail serves as an easy-to-understand guide to modern genetics research and its practical applications.
http://www1.omi.tulane.edu/ecme
Participate in a virtual scientific symposium at a Web site sponsored by the Center for Bioenvironmental Research of Tulane and
http://thomas.loc.gov
Policy junkies can take a quick trip to the nation's capital at Thomas Legislative Information on the Internet. You can search for a specific bill or troll for legislation on a variety of topics. A search for the word "ozone," for example, turns up 30 items, including a bill to amend the Clean Air Act. If you want to brush up on the legislative process, visit the section that explains how laws are made. This site also contains historical documents, including the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
http://www.healthfinder.gov
The ultimate Web site for access to consumer-oriented medical information is the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Healthfinder. It includes information on diseases from A to Z with links to more than 1,250 other reliable sites. If you're looking for help with heart disease, for example, the tour provides clear explanations of the warning signs and a section on how to ward off this killer. Armed with the basics, you can then venture farther afield to a variety of other sites. (The American Heart Association site has a feature that lets you calculate your risk of developing heart disease.)
http://www.nih.gov/health
The Health Information Page provides one-stop access to information from the National Institutes of Health. Here you can link to Medline, a database run by the National Library of Medicine which has more than 8.8 million references to articles published in medical journals around the world. Check out the National Cancer Institute or the Office of AIDS Research. The National Library of Medicine's images from the history of medicine include portraits, caricatures, and graphic art. Don't leave this site without stopping at the Visible Human Project -- digitized images of the human body.
http://www.shapeup.org
At Shapeup
http://www.madsci.org
If you're the sort of traveler who has a lot of questions, turn to
http://whyfiles.news.wisc.edu
For the inside scoop on any story in the news, try the Why? files, sponsored by the
The Internet offers scientific facts and fun
By KATHLEEN FACKELMANN
http://www.sciencenews.org