Incoming Resources
- The ages of Gaia, a biography of our living earth, by James Lovelock
- From so simple a beginning, the book of evolution, Philip Whitfield
- The ptarmigan's dilemma, an exploration into how life organizes and supports itself, John Theberge and Mary Theberge
- Wonders of Life, Exploring the Most Extraordinary Phenomenon in the Universe, Brian Cox
- The life of the cell, its nature, origin, and development, [by] J. A. V. Butler
- Living things, Robin Kerrod ; [illustrators, Graham Allen and others ]
- Life itself, a comprehensive inquiry into the nature, origin, and fabrication of life, Robert Rosen
- Where do babies come from?, Angela Royston
- Earth from above, produced by Montparnasse Productions
- Life's edge, the search for what it means to be alive, Carl Zimmer
- The living planet, a portrait of the earth, BBC Enterprises
- At the heart of the web, the inevitable genesis of intelligent life, George A. Seielstad
- The web of life, a new scientific understanding of living systems, Fritjof Capra
- The beauty of the beastly, new views on the nature of life, Natalie Angier
- Vital principles, the molecular mechanisms of life, Andrew Scott
- The biology of wonder, aliveness, feeling, and the metamorphosis of science, Andreas Weber
- Death, the scientific facts to help us understand it better, Richard BĂ©liveau, Denis Gingras
- Nature, The Serengeti rules, a production of HHMI, Tangled Bank Studios and Passion Planet ; in association with Sandbox Films, Thirteen Productions LLC and WNET ; producers, David Allen and Gaby Bastyra ; director, Nicolas Brown
- The ages of Gaia, a biography of our living earth, by James Lovelock ; [foreword by Lewis Thomas]
- The joy of science, The Teaching Company, Part IV
- Nature fast and nature slow, how life works, from fractions of a second to billions of years, Nicholas P. Money
- Life's engines, how microbes made Earth habitable, Paul G. Falkowski
- The vanishing face of gaia, a final warning, James Lovelock
- The seven mysteries of life, an exploration in science & philosophy, Guy Murchie ; illustrated by the author
- The living planet, a portrait of the earth, David Attenborough
- The Serengeti rules, the quest to discover how life works and why it matters, Sean B. Carroll
- The coevolution of climate and life, Stephen H. Schneider, Randi Londer
- The living planet, a portrait of the earth, by David Attenborough ; a BBC TV production in association with Time-Life Video, 1-2
- The way life works, Mahlon Hoagland and Bert Dodson
- The Serengeti rules, the quest to discover how life works and why it matters, Sean B. Carroll
- A tear at the edge of creation, a radical new vision for life in an imperfect universe, Marcelo Gleiser
- Life on Earth, a natural history, David Attenborough
- Wonders of life, exploring the most extraordinary force in the universe, Brian Cox ; and Andrew Cohen
- Life, series producer, Martha Holmes ; a BBC/Discovery Channel/SKAI co-production ; the Open University
- The beauty of the beastly, new views on the nature of life, Natalie Angier
- Life evolving, molecules, mind, and meaning, Christian de Duve
- Of molecules and men, Francis Crick
- Life, series producer, Martha Holmes ; a BBC/Discovery Channel/SKAI co-production ; the Open University
- A decade of discovery, U.S. Department of Energy ; managing editor, Claire Sharp
- What is life?, five great ideas in biology, Paul Nurse
- Ether, God, and Devil., Cosmic superimposition, With five chapters newly translated by Therese Pol
- The restless clock, a history of the centuries-long argument over what makes living things tick, Jessica Riskin
- Vital dust, life as a cosmic imperative, Christian de Duve
- Life, produced by Rupert Barrington, Adam Chapman, Martha Holmes, Neil Lucas, Patrick Morris and Ted Oakes
- Life's ratchet, how molecular machines extract order from chaos, Peter M. Hoffmann
- Extinction and evolution, what fossils reveal about the history of life, Niles Eldredge ; introduction by Carl Zimmer
- Life, series producer, Martha Holmes ; producer/writer, Paul Spillenger ; a BBC/Discovery Channel/SKAI co-production in association with RTI SpA
- The medea hypothesis, is life on earth ultimately self-destructive?, Peter Ward
- True life adventures, Volume 4: 1975-1976
- The mystery of life, how nothing became everything, Jan Paul Schutten ; illustrated by Floor Rieder ; translated by Laura Watkinson