"An elegant guided tour 
through the human mind.”* 
nSWOto 
OFTHEMIND 
GORDON RffiMTHLOR 
Deja-vu . . . telepathy. . . psycho- 
somatic illness.. . the author of 
the best-selling The Biological 
Time Bomb explores many 
puzzles of human experience 
in this stimulating account of 
the workings of the mind — and 
describes in detail the anatomy 
and physiology of the brain, as 
well as the latest discoveries 
in neuroscience. 
* \ V Times Book Review 
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625 Madison Ave., New York 10022 
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Brian Mason is curator of the De- 
partment of Mineral Sciences at the 
Smithsonian Institution in Washing- 
ton, D.C. Born in New Zealand, he 
took his Ph.D. in mineralogy halfway 
across the world at the University of 
Stockholm. His interest in meteorites 
dates from his days as a graduate 
student and has caused him to con- 
centrate on that subject for the past 
twenty-five years. Before going to 
the Smithsonian in 1965, Mason was 
chairman of the Department of Min- 
eralogy at the American Museum. 
Lawrence Grossman is associate 
professor of geochemistry in the De- 
partment of the Geophysical Sci- 
ences and the Enrico Fermi Institute 
at the University of Chicago. A spe- 
cialist in cosmo- and geo-chemistry, 
he has been a NASA consultant on 
lunar data and the Mariner Jupiter 
orbiter, and has lectured at the Field 
Museum of Natural History. One 
of his areas of research is the chemi- 
cal and isotopic compositions of the 
different petrographic components 
of chondritic meteorites as clues to 
the behavior of the elements during 
the condensation of the solar system. 
Donald E. Brownlee is associate 
professor of astronomy at the Uni- 
versity of Washington in Seattle, 
where he earned his doctorate. His 
current research is directed toward 
the analysis of interplanetary dust 
from the stratosphere, coral atolls, 
and the ocean floor. Pursuit of that 
work has involved “many nights in 
cold observatories and an oceano- 
graphic cruise from Acapulco to Ha- 
waii to collect cosmic dust.” Most 
of the year Brownlee lives on a house- 
boat on a Seattle lake, but he also 
“feels a strong attraction to moun- 
tains, beaches, sand dunes, palm 
trees, and penguins.” 
6 
