I'm sure there are many, but perhaps you are talking about Henry Cavendish. He made many discoveries, some were stolen by others, years after his death manyvolumes of his laboratory studies were made public, but I don't think he actually published anything.
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Scientific inquiry is important because it gives us a chance to solve problems by using what we already know. It forces us to use our critical thinking skills. At the end of the scientific inquiry, we end up learning something new that we have never learned before. It also gives us the chance to become scientifically curious. I hope this helps :)
False it is always acceptable!
Scientific knowledge will never be complete, there will always be questions that need answers.
Since glass was invented, the scientists were able to create the microscope. If this was never invented, the scientists would never have been able to discover cells.
"We of the Never Never" by Mrs Aeneas Gunn was first published in 1908.
No, definite scientific evidence has never been published nor has any definite evidence to the contrary been produced.
Mary Anning never married. She dedicated her life to fossil hunting along the Jurassic Coast in England, making numerous important discoveries in paleontology.
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She never knew that it would ever be published.
It never was published.
never
Joseph Stalin had informers in among Lenin's secretaries who told him about the Testament. Stalin got control of it and never let it be published.
Never? Avoid thinking in absolutes. It is much better to understand published statistics but impossible to say "never safe to ...".
Never? Avoid thinking in absolutes. It is much better to understand published statistics but impossible to say "never safe to ...".
It was NEVER published! "you kissed a girl" isn't a song, "I kissed a girl" is the actual name
His first book, It Never Rained: Five Stories, was published in 1974.