The first scientist to study how things fall was Galileo Galilei in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. He conducted experiments to understand the motion of falling objects, famously dropping spheres of different weights from the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Galileo's work laid the foundation for classical physics by challenging the prevailing Aristotelian view that heavier objects fall faster than lighter ones. His studies contributed significantly to the development of the laws of motion.
There is no specific word for a scientist who studies tornadoes. Such scientists would fall under the general label of meteorologists; weather scientists.
Oh, dude, those people are called physicists. They're the ones who study all the cool stuff like why things fall down and why we don't float away into space. So, like, next time you drop your sandwich, just remember there's a physicist out there somewhere analyzing the intricacies of gravity.
Acorns and leaves are common things that fall from oak trees.
The first stage is jettisoned, to fall back to earth, as the fuel runs out.
In a free fall environment, you do not have gravity to separate things for you, so a centrifuge is a workable alternative.
By and large, scientists will not study subjects for which that study method is inappropriate. Articles of belief would fall under that heading, including such things as homeopathy, economics, the meaning of art, and so on.
I assume that would fall under something a geologist would study
Things Fall Apart was originally published in London.
There are exactly 6 chapters in part 2 of Things Fall Apart.
The first part is required to introduce you to the setting and atmosphere of Things Fall Apart. It is a more descriptive expository, and focuses more on the people of the Igbo as opposed to the plot.
The first crop in "Things Fall Apart" was poor and led to hardship for the villagers. This poor harvest was seen as an omen of troubled times ahead, signaling a period of struggle and change for the community.
Isaac Newton
A scientist who studies hurricanes is called a meteorologist or a hurricane researcher. They specialize in understanding the formation, behavior, and impact of hurricanes on the environment and society.
Astrology, lol. But to be less vague, (according to dictionary.com) "the study that assumes and attempts to interpret the influence of the heavenly bodies on human affairs." So things like "horoscopes" fall under that.
Scientists who chase tornadoes to study them fall under the category of meteorologists; weather scientists. Most storm chasers, though, are not scientists. Most are photographers, storm spotters, or thrill-seekers.
first
It was the author's choice. The first part of Things Fall Apart carries the job of introducing the environment and the characters at the same time as describing the plot. By the second part, the introductions are mostly done.