Criminal Minds revolves around an elite team of FBI profilers who analyze the country's most twisted criminal minds, before they strike again.The Behavioral Analysis Unit's most prominent agent is David Rossi (Joe Mantegna), a founding member of the BAU, who returns to help the team solve new cases, while pursuing some unfinished business of his own. Each member brings his or her own area of expertise to the table as they pinpoint predators' motivations and identify their emotional triggers in the attempt to stop them. Parental guidance: recommended ages 17+
Edited by: stovokor - 9 November 2009
Reason: Episode 20 added, season 3 completed, enjoy :)
Added by: lucius5 | Karma: 1660.85 | Non-Fiction, Other | 11 March 2009
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The ultimate single–source cookbook for a world of appetizers. Whether in the form of a passed hors d′oeuvre, canape, or a dish of small bites placed at a table setting, appetizers are the perfect showcase of a cook′s creativity and skill. Whether in the form of a passed hors d′oeuvre, canape, or a dish of small bites placed at a table setting, appetizers are the perfect showcase of a cook′s creativity and skill. The Appetizer Atlas brings together an enticing range of starters from around the world that will help lead off any dining experience in style.
One of the most familiar features of any high-school chemistry lab
is the Periodic Table of Elements. Elegant, informative, useful to any
student in the lab - the Periodic Table neatly summarizes our
scientific knowledge of the chemical elements from hydrogen to uranium
and beyond - atomic number, atomic weight, isotopes, and more. But how
did scientists discover all of these features of the elements? How did
the Periodic Table come to be? And, even more basically, how did the
concept of the chemical element come to dominate how scientists
understand chemistry?
This book shows readers the answers to these and
other questions regarding the scientific understanding of matter. The
Chemical Element, a volume in the Greenwood Guides to Great Ideas in
Science, traces the history of this tremendously powerful concept from
the ancient philosophers to the present day.
You know that you need oxygen to breathe, that neon can glow and chrome shines?
But did you know that your cell phone contains arsenic, your spectacles contain rhodium and that the tin pest is not a disease?
And can you name just three researchers whom we have to thank for all these results?
Here, Professor Quadbeck-Seeger, a long-serving member of the board at BASF, goes in search of these and other questions.
Based on the periodic table, the key reference source for any natural scientist, he explains the criteria that define an element's position in the table and are responsible for its particular characteristics. In a clear and concise manner, he describes for each element the story behind its discovery, its physical and chemical properties as well as its role in our everyday lives.
Enriched by a wealth of interesting details, this beautifully designed book in full color represents not only varied reading, but also a treasure trove of surprising facts.
Le Morte d’Arthur tells the story of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. The tale begins with Arthur’s birth, his education, and his rise to the throne.
It also recounts the tragic love story of Sir Lancelot and Guinevere, the destruction of the Round Table and Arthur’s mysterious disappearance or death.