Scientists, engineers, veterinarians, even college students--people all over the world are discovering the power of poop.
O.
This uniquely crafted narrative nonfiction invites readers to follow the author into Science labs, forests, hospitals, and landfills, as the author asks: Who uses poo? Poop is disgusting, but it\'s also packed with potential.
This irreverent and engaging book shows that poop isn\'t just waste-and that dealing with it responsibly is our duty.
There\'s even a train full of human poop sludge that\'s stuck without a home in Alabama.
And every week, some folks deliver their own poop to medical facilities, where it is swirled, separated, and shipped off to a hospital to be transplanted into anOther human.
AnOther discovered that mastodon poop years ago is the reason we enjoy pumpkin pie today.
One scientist spent months training a dog to track dung to better understand elephant birthing patterns.
This uniquely crafted narrative nonfiction invites readers to follow the author into Science labs, forests, hospitals, and landfills, as the author asks: Who uses poo? Poop is disgusting, but it\'s also packed with potential.
Poo even has the power to save human lives.
Solutions for the energetic needs of our society.
In journalistic style similar to Something Rotten, this middle grade narrative nonfiction follows the author as she asks the question: Who uses poo? Although it is packed with potty humor, this narrative holds weighty matter too: The discovery of a nutrient cycle that powers the ocean ecosystem.
There, someone swirls, separates, and ships it off to a hospital to be transplanted into anOther human.
And every week an entire team of folks swallow their pride and deliver their own poop to medical facilities.
In a quest for precious cheetah poo anOther scientist army-crawled through the mud risking her life between an adult elephant and a water buffalo.
One woman spent three months videotaping elephants, giraffes, and rhinos pooping in the zoo.
It\'s a window into the world of wildlife, and some people are willing to go to extremes to make use of this so-called crap.
But in this book, you\'ll see that this waste is packed with potential.
And it\'s disgusting.
Undergrads turn astronaut waste into plastic - for use as a wrench on Mars Poop, doo-doo, scat, feces, whatever you call it, it\'s everywhere.
A scientist uses scat to solve the mystery of a vanishing cave-dwelling critter.
A guy in England powers a street lamp with pet poo.
Scientists, engineers, veterinarians, even college students--people all over the world are discovering the power of poop