Scientific American Magazine Vol 179 Issue 6

Scientific American Magazine

Volume 179, Issue 6

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Features

Public Opinion Polls

Why did they fail? A leading authority assays their weaknesses and suggests some tested new techniques that would improve their accuracy

Rensis Likert

A Crisis in U.S. Archaeology

The damming of rivers will shortly flood the valleys where lived the aboriginal Americans. Archaeologists must work fast to save what they can of the remains

Frank H. H. Roberts

The Navigation of Birds

How do they find their way in their vast migrations over land and water? Some new evidence on an old mystery

Donald R. Griffin

Enzymes

They are the catalysts of life. Long known for their ability to turn sugar into alcohol, they engineer a host of other biochemical reactions

John E. Pfeiffer

On the Development of Cancer

Transplanting tissue from one species to the eye of another yields a new insight into the nature of the malignant process

Harry S. N. Greene

Stone Age Mathematics

The earliest comprehension of number and geometry appears to go back farther than the time of the Egyptians and Babylonians

Dirk J. Struik

Alcoholics and Metabolism

Individuality, points out the author, has a basis in biochemistry. The study of such variations may help in determining what creates compulsive drinkers

Roger J. Williams

Departments

Letters to the Editors, December 1948

50 and 100 Years Ago: December 1948

Science and the Citizen: December 1948

Books

The Amateur Astronomer

An Index of Articles and Authors

Bibliography