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Free CSIRO Publishing Tote Bag with Every Order + Discounted Books + Free Standard Delivery over $80 @ CSIRO Publishing

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Science is a Gift!

CSIRO Publishing have gathered a fabulous selection of books that will make the perfect gift for your science-loving friends and family. Because science is a gift!

https://www.publish.csiro.au/catalogues/gift

For extra holiday cheer, all orders over $80 will receive free standard shipping within Australia and New Zealand. PLUS, there are discounts on some books, and every order will receive a free CSIRO Publishing tote bag!

Some of the titles on sale include:
*The Secret Life of Flies $15 (WAS $29.95)
*Bees of Australia $40 (WAS $49.99)
*Beachcombing $22 (WAS $27.99)
*Plant Names $35 (WAS $44.99)

Aiming for delivery before Christmas? We recommend ordering by 8 December for standard delivery and by 16 December for express post delivery.

Love our books? Sign up to our Email Alerts to keep up-to-date with our new releases. https://www.publish.csiro.au/books/earlyalert

Small print: These special offers only apply to orders of print books placed through the CSIRO Publishing website. Free tote bags and free shipping special offers only valid until 8 December 2022. Free tote bags will be sent with all valid orders during the promotional period or while stocks last. All book orders over $80 will qualify for free standard shipping to Australia and New Zealand, which will be automatically applied once you enter an eligible postal address during the checkout. Special sale prices on books are valid only until 16 December 2022, whilst stock lasts, do not apply to eBooks and no further discounts apply.

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closed Comments

    • -1

      Trash article. If you've ever worked with CSIRO they have a split funding arrangement with agencies/industries, it's how they operate and they have rigorous processes.

      The whole argument is literally anybody financing research has ulterior motives. If the worst CSIRO did was not clarify methane as a greenhouse gas, then frankly, shame on Pocock for stirring the pot. Brand new to the position and this is what you pick on, translation errors over methane gas? There are like a dozen actual worldwide issues that we should be focusing on.

      • +1

        When your funding is dependent on external bodies with their own interests, it's hard for the science to remain factual and unbiased, especially when the CSIRO is looking to 'accelerate commericalism'

        The purpose of knowing who is funding research is to know if there are vested interests at play, as few commercial organisations are going to be happy with funding and publishing research against their own interests. Obscuring facts (methane 'may play a role' vs. plays a major role) has always been the name of the game, so it's hard to view this as an error. It always seems these statements turn out to be 'errors' when companies are called out.

        We’re driven by purpose but remain objective. We fight misinformation with facts. We earn trust everywhere through everything we do. We trust each other and we hold each other accountable. Together our actions drive Australia’s trust in CSIRO.

        Holding institutions accountable to their own mission statements isn't 'stirring the pot,' and is exactly what elected officials should be doing. Also yeah, shame on an Australian senator holding the national science agency to account over its climate credentials.. I'd ask where the whataboutism stops, but I know it doesn't.

        • If you read the article, they informed the Minister for Science, Ed Husic on the matter. Pocock is 'stirring the pot' as he's an elected ACT official weighing in because CSIRO is 'in the ACT', regardless that all of this research was done in Darwin.

          The argument/article functionally comes down to 'CSIRO screwed up the translation'. All the English copies are correctly worded and GISERA is listed, that's how they knew. The issue is the NT Indig Translation service.

  • Great timing lol

  • Some books cheaper than Booktopia, others more expensive

    CSIRO vs. Booktopia

    • Bees of Australia $40 vs $37.75
    • Plant Names $35 vs $103.75 (??)

    Non-sale items (but highly recommended regardless) are The Australian Bird Guide, and Compact Australian Bird Guide, both currently on sale at Booktopia.
    Almost as cheap on CSIRO site when purchased as a pack ($68 vs $65.5, not including shipping). Throw something in to get over that $80 and will actually be worth it.

  • Hi OP, do you have any upcoming deals on the Double Helix Science Magazine Subscription?

  • Hi everyone, the free tote bag special offer was valid only while stocks lasted and we have just exhausted our stock. Thanks!

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