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STEM Chronology: The History of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics

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STEM Chronology by Bryan Bunch (with contributions from Alexander Hellemans) consists of about 10,000 chronological reports from 3,400,000 BCE through 2018 detailing the main contributions to SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING, and MATHEMATICS for each year. Interspersed among the entries are 182 short essays on topics of special interest and short biographies of 200 scientists (lists attached). Although the text is based on The History of Science and Technology (published by Houghton Mifflin in 2004), STEM Chronology is considerably revised, using a different format while adding many new entries and details to existing entries, extending the manuscript in both directions chronologically so that it now covers from 3,400,000 BCE to 2017 (2018 to be added before publication.) There is also a completely new, extensive index.STEM Chronology is simpler than The History of Science and Technology in that the long introductions to different periods in history and all the artwork/photography are omitted. The format is simple. Each year that is covered includes notable events in the four categories grouped by category.Unlike other histories of science, technology, engineering, or mathematics, STEM Chronology attempts to explain every important event in those subjects rather than focusing on a broad approach to major developments. In the age of Google, a researcher can often locate information about a topic, but he or she needs to know what to ask for, which is not always easy to find. The entries in STEM Chronology get to the heart of the matter without mixing information from other events. Internal cross-references make it easy to trace the development of important topics from year to year.

1851 pages, Kindle Edition

Published March 5, 2021

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About the author

Bryan Bunch

30 books3 followers
BRYAN BUNCH got his B.A. in English (more writing than literature) and taught high-school English and wrote poetry for a year after graduation, then started work in New York publishing as a copyeditor. Shortly after it appeared that the U.S. might lose the space race to the Soviet Union, he returned to his early love of mathematics and began graduate studies, specializing in foundations and logic. This led to changing from reference books to el-high textbooks as a mathematics editor. During 20 years in the textbook field, he also headed the math and science departments, ending his career as editor-in-chief. When he left textbook editing to become a consultant and freelance editor, he left behind with the trade division of his company a proposal for a book, which became published as Mathematical Fallacies and Paradoxes (still in print in a Dover edition). Joining The Hudson Group of writers led to freelance work on reference books. Bryan soon started Scientific Publishing, Inc., devoted to using computers in publishing (the PC was brand new at the time; he bought the first one produced by IBM as soon as it was available) and focusing on current science, science history, and medicine. Bryan ran scientific publishing for 25 years before retiring--to a degree, as he continues to write.

BOOKS BY BRYAN BUNCH
201? Figures among the Stars (YA novel about adventures of young Archimedes and his friends)
2004 The History of Science and Technology, Houghton-Mifflin (with Alexander
Hellemans); also available in leather-bound Easton Press edition and a Kindle edition.
2003 Discover Science Almanac, Hyperion (with Jenny Tesar)
2001 Blackbirch Encyclopedia of Science and Invention, Blackbirch Press (with Jenny Tesar).
2000 Penguin Desk Encyclopedia of Science and Mathematics, Penguin U.S.A. (with Jenny Tesar--named by AAAS Science Books as one of the three best science reference books of the year)
2000 The Kingdom of Infinite Number: A Field Guide, W.H. Freeman (Natural Science Book Club selection; New York Public Library 2001 Books for Teen Age List), also available for Kindle
1998 Satellites and Probes (with Clint Hachett; vol. 12 of Outer Space), Grolier. Highly recommended by Book Report November/December 1998.
1998 Family Encyclopedia of Disease, W. H. Freeman (Editor).
1997 Mathematical Fallacies and Paradoxes, Dover Publications (paperbound)
1996 The Globe Junior High School Science Series, New Revised Edition, Globe Book Company (Senior Author).
Handbook of Current Science and Technology (Gale Research).
1994 Handbook of Current Health and Medicine (Gale Research).
1993 The Timetables of Technology (with Alexander Hellemans), Simon and Schuster; also available as a CD ROM in 1997.
1992 The Henry Holt Handbook of Current Science and Technology, Henry Holt and Company; listed by Library Journal as one of the best science books of 1992 and by the American Librarians Association among the best reference sources of 1992.
1991 The Timetables of Science, new, updated edition (with Alexander Hellemans), Touchstone Books (Library of Science Book Club, Quality Paperback Book Club)
1990 Excel in Graphing Level H (with Margaret Hill), Modern Curriculum Press.
1989 Reality's Mirror: Exploring the Mathematics of Symmetry, John Wiley; listed by Library Journal as one of the best science books of 1989; also published in Japan in Japanese.
1988 The Timetables of Science (with Alexander Hellemans), Simon and Schuster; also published in England, in Germany (in German), in Japan (in Japanese), and Romania (in Rumanian).
1986 The Globe Junior High School Science Series, Globe Book Company (Senior Author).
1985 Harper & Row Elementary Mathematics, Grades K 8, Macmillan McGraw (Co author).
1984 The Science Almanac, Doubleday
1984 A Practical Herb Garden (with recipes), TAB Books.
1983 Algebra One, McDougal, Littell (Co author). Fun with Math, World Book Childcraft.
1982 Mathematical Fallacies and Paradoxes, Van Nostrand Reinhold

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