Scientific Dictionary
Only certain people need a scientific dictionary. It provides a lot of information for scientists. The term is used for a lot of different books. They cover all the sciences from biology, chemistry, to physics and in others. We’ll examine a few.
There’s a good scientific dictionary on the Internet. Kimball’s Biology Pages is the name. It includes a search engine as well as an alphabetic list. Each letter of the alphabet links to an index of topics. Let’s look at one of these.
Under z in this scientific dictionary can be found zygotene. It’s when cells separate into chromosomes. It only occurs in certain cells. This type of cell is located within a membrane.
The scientific dictionary also contains information about chimera. Genetic mosaic is another name for it. It’s when two early embryos combine into one. It happens within the human species too. The word derives from a Greek myth – a creature with a lion’s head, a serpent’s tail and a goat’s body, and sometimes even more animal parts.
The scientific dictionary chimera is not the chimera of mythology. It roamed Asia minor. The Iliad talked about it. It was a fire breather. It was sometimes described as having heads from a lion, goat and serpent.
The chimera’s sibling isn’t in the scientific dictionary. It was called a Hydra. This creature had more than one head. Hercules faced one of them. If Hercules cut off one head, two more would grow from the neck. Killing it wasn’t easy.
A scientific dictionary might also teach math to kids. One of these, online, has Flash animations. There’s a lot of good knowledge to be gained from it. For example kids can learn about the acute angle. Any angle less than 90