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The Strangest Things in the World: A Book About Extraordinary Manifestations of Nature

Chapter 3: INTRODUCTION
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About This Book

A compact compendium of nature's curious manifestations, presenting short, topical essays that survey extraordinary biological phenomena from invisible soil jungles and microscopic ecosystems to extreme habitats and unusual parasites. Drawing on museum collections, scientific literature, and decades of reporting, the text explains adaptive strategies, species diversity, and puzzling processes such as nitrogen fixation, while noting how much remains unknown. Organized as numerous individual sections, it blends descriptive natural history with accessible scientific explanation to provoke wonder and highlight the paradoxes that continue to drive biological inquiry.

INTRODUCTION

The challenges of Nature’s paradoxes have been sharp spurs to man’s search for knowledge since the start of science.

Fortunately the number of these paradoxes is infinite, and so the quests are endless. Man never will know a wonderless world. In the phenomena of life especially we have come only to the zone of morning twilight. The bright day of understanding is ahead. As its hours pass we can expect a constant succession of new paradoxes, new spurs to further advances.

Man would be in a sad situation were it otherwise. For the bright light of noon and afternoon inevitably precedes sunset and darkness and sleep.

This book is a compendium of some of Nature’s curiosities and contradictions in the field of life and as such it well may awaken that wonder which, as somebody has said, is the beginning of knowledge.

The author is one of the world’s best-known and most respected science writers. This book is a personal and unique distillation of the wisdom he has developed in a lifetime of dealing with man’s effort to resolve the paradoxes of nature.

Leonard Carmichael

Secretary of the
Smithsonian Institution