Get Help Writing Your Paper Here
  home | faq | cancel
search papers :
Paper Topics
> American History
> Arts and Theater
> Biography
> Book Reports
> Computer
> Creative Writing
> Economics
> English
> Geography
> Health
> Legal Issues
> Miscellaneous
> Music
> Poetry
> Political
> Religion
> Science
> Social Issues
> World History
> Sign Up Today

We have been helping thousands of students with their term papers since 1998. We can help you with yours too.
> Register


Help With Science Papers



Geomorphic
[ view this term paper ]Words: 690 | Pages: 3

... area is described as treeless; dwarf shrubs, stunted sedges, mosses, lichens, short grasses; alpine and grass meadows. Los Angeles, California, placed on Mediterranean shrubland (MSh) terrestrial biome. Vegetation characteristic in this area is described as short shrub, drought adapted, tending to grassy woodlands chaparral. In Fargo, North Dakota, needleleaf forest and montane forest (NF/MF) makes vegetation in that area characterized as is needleleaf conifers, evergreen pine, spruce, fir, Russian larch and a deciduous needleleaf. Global Climate and Species Adaptations Nome, Alaska is located in ET/Dwd of Koppen ...




Dinosaurs
[ view this term paper ]Words: 714 | Pages: 3

... Oxford, England, by Rev. William Buckland. These were named Megalosaurus. Thousands of specimens have since been discovered nearly worldwide. Different types of dinosaurs varied greatly in form and size, and they were adapted for diverse habitats. Their means of survival can only be identified from their fossil remains, and some identifications are in dispute. They ranged in weight from 4 to 6 lb., in the case of the compsognathus, and up to 160,000 lb., in the case of the brachiosaurus. Most dinosaurs were large, weighing more than 1,100 lb., and few weighed less than 100 lb. Most were herbivores, but some sau ...




Gulf War Syndrome
[ view this term paper ]Words: 3627 | Pages: 14

... different definitions of the syndrome. For example, Gunjan Sinja states that scientist Garth Nicolson, chairman of tumor biology at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, defines the syndrome as Mycoplasma fermentans. Sinha also stated that Mycoplasma fermentan was “the most poorly studied bug on the list (Sinha 70).” Nicolson has found that the M. fermentans is nested inside the cells of almost half of all cases. Sinha defines Mycoplasmas as “the smallest self-replicating life form that latch onto white bloodcells, which are part of the body’s disease defenses, wit ...




Changes In The Earth's Environment
[ view this term paper ]Words: 2141 | Pages: 8

... intervention with humans and their lifestyle. With the discovery of the ozone hole in the 1980's attention was now more focused on the threat humans were posing to the environment. With scientific evidence to back up pessimistic predictions of our future, most people, through media coverage, political pressures and general concern now see the environment as being truly threatened by human progress and in desperate need of help. Natural hazards have been defined as “...extreme geophysical events greatly exceeding normal human expectations in terms of their magnitude or frequency and causing significant dama ...




Geothermal Energy
[ view this term paper ]Words: 4709 | Pages: 18

... they require enormous amounts of land to produce any large amounts of energy. I believe that geothermal energy may be an alternative source of energy in the future. There are many things that we must take into consideration before geothermal energy can be a possibility for a human resource. I will be discussing some of these issues, questions, and problems. In the beginning when the solar system was young, the earth was still forming, things were very different. A great mass of elements swirled around a dense core in the middle. As time went on the accumulation elements with similar physical properties ...




The Planet Mars
[ view this term paper ]Words: 742 | Pages: 3

... of the spacecraft. This needs to be light weight, for the cost of fuel is simply to much to reckon with. And , probably the most important, how to keep the space craft fueled. A consideration has been to drop off fuel deposits on Mars for the trip home. But there are still many questions left open. The most recent of NASA’s plan, is this... They’ll use 3 different space ships: A habitat lander, a cargo lander, and a crew transport vehicle. The CTV carries them to the habitat lander. They land on Mars, and do their business. When they’re done, the habitat lander takes them back up to orbit where the ...




How Eagles Live
[ view this term paper ]Words: 605 | Pages: 3

... fish catches, they also eat carrion. The bald eagle is an endangered species and is only numerous in Florida, where there are breeding sanctuaries. The bald eagle makes its nest with a bulky platform of sticks in a tall tree, and normally has between 2-3 white eggs per season. The golden eagle has the scientific name of aquila chrysaetos and is named for its golden appearance. It is a member of the hawk family. It has a wingspan of six and a half to seven and a half feet, and can live to be thirty or more years old. The adult golden eagle is evenly dark below, or with a lighting at the base of its tail ...




Fire Ants
[ view this term paper ]Words: 2119 | Pages: 8

... they had sailed from South America to the ports of Alabama (2. Lockley 31). The two basic species of fire ants in the United States are the are black and red, they vary in length from one eighth to one quarter inch. Black fire ants arrived first followed shortly by the infamous imported red fire ants. Black ants (Solenopsis Richteri Forel) were the first to arrive and spread slowly but steadily despite government intervention to stop them from spreading(3. Lockley 33). These black ants would spread much further then the second wave of imported ants recognized as Solenopsis Invicta Buren or red fire ants(4. Lockl ...




A Balloon And Science
[ view this term paper ]Words: 422 | Pages: 2

... at the same time. Gravity is the force of attraction between two objects. Gravity says" what goes up, must come down." Gravity pulls the balloon and straw downwards so it drags against the fishing line. Sir Isaac Newton made up the three laws of motion. He lived 500 years ago. The first law of motion is: An object at rest will stay at rest and an object in motion will stay in motion unless a force makes the object change its state of rest or motion. This means the rocket balloon won't start until you let go of the closing (hole). It wont stop until it runs out of air or something is in the way of its' path. ...




Arthritis 2
[ view this term paper ]Words: 867 | Pages: 4

... in bone. New planes of motion contrary to normal anatomical planes appear, followed by enzymatic degradation of the tissues. Ligaments become lax, losing their tensile strength. The cartilage that caps the ends of bones, and which is normally four times more slippery than Teflon, loses that slipperiness and becomes perforated by ulcers. Many of the changes that occur in the joints of people with rheumatoid arthritis and osteo-arthritis are assumed to be caused by a disease process, when in fact they are often a consequence of relative immobility. These findings underscore the enormous importance of exercise in t ...




Browse: « prev  47  48  49  50  51  next »

Copyright © 2024 PaperHelp. All rights reserved