
In The New Everyday Science Explained, by Curt Suplee, National Geographic, 2003, ISBN 0-7922-7357-5, Richard Thompson is given credit for the following drawings (thanks to National Geographic collector Richard Kennedy for the list):
- p. 15 (bottom) Kicking soccer and bowling balls
- p. 20 Stepping from dinghy to dock
- p. 27 (left) Elastic vs. inelastic collisions with a tennis racket
- p. 30 (bottom) Car breaking down
- p. 32 (bottom) Archimedes on a lever lifting the world
- p. 68 Couple running on beach demonstrating convection of heat
- p. 76 (bottom) Man in elevator demonstrating acceleration
- p. 80 Bullet dropped and fired hit the ground simultaneously
- p. 87 Couple demonstrating that opposites attract
- p. 94-95 House showing multiple motors
- p. 114 Man on sidewalk being bombarded by different electromagnetic signals
- p. 130 (bottom) Periodic table of elements in classroom setting
- p. 134 Man holding hoop with animals jumping through it showing the work of catalysts
- p. 144 Man adding water to glass tub of ingredients and creating a new person illustrating that our bodies are mostly water
- p. 168 (bottom) Fashion models on runway wearing barrels marked with artificial ingredients
- p. 186 Cafeteria "Build You Own PROTEIN at the Amino Acid Bar"
- p. 190 Hamsters on stadium seating holding panels that make a picture of a hamster
- p. 193 Three dogs showing chromosome transmittal to offspring
- p. 212 Flu viruses in front of "International Panel of Scientists"
- p. 237 (top) Man on assembly line demonstrating liver functions
- p. 244 Drawing of a person with body parts sized according to the number of sensory nerves they contain
- p. 246 Interior of head showing that images on the retina are upside down
- p. 264 Man in bed dreaming
1 comment:
wOw! What a wonderful treat. Gorgeous work.
Post a Comment