Looking for a brainy gift?

Learning Resources

Learning Resources offers a "Brain Anatomy Model" that'll make anyone feel big-brained.

The ninth annual Science Geek Gift roundup features holiday presents for the science-minded types on your list. But we’ll need your help to make the smartest choice.

Sure, there are lots of other msnbc.com holiday gift guides you could turn to. You could check out Life Inc., the Holiday Tech Guide, the TODAY Holiday Guide, even a list of crazy kitchen gadgets. But would any of those guides tell you where to get a nuclear-powered toy, a T-shirt to do science in or a six-dimensional crystal sculpture?

I didn't think so.

The guiding principle behind the Science Geek Gift Guide is to seek out the most educational and enlightening gifts, the items that best capture the scientific zeitgeist, or gewgaws that are just plain gooey with geekiness.


For example, let us consider brains. Braaaaains. If zombies were hot this Halloween, and "The Walking Dead" is the "most satisfying new series" of the current TV season, surely brains are just the thing for Christmas. You could decorate your desktop with the 4-inch-high Learning Resources' Brain Anatomy Model ($13 to $18), which gives you a cerebral cortex about the size of a Granny Smith apple (according to one not-completely-satisfied buyer). Or you could go with the pricier but life-sized Budget Brain With Arteries ($44). Or take your pick of brains at the Brain Mart.

This is also going to be the last holiday season for NASA's space shuttle fleet, so if there's a space geek on your holiday list, you'll want to beat the rush. Take a look through the shuttle memorabilia in the Kennedy Space Center's online space shop and on The Space Store website. And if you're looking for something that's handcrafted rather than mass-produced, check out the selection of NASA-themed craft items on the Etsy website.

Speaking of space, how about decking the halls with a solar system? I believe the holiday season is a time to be generous with our planet definition, particularly because I've written a book about "The Case for Pluto." That's why I favor planetary displays that don't stop at Neptune. The Authentic Models mobile is stylish, but perhaps too pricey ($85 to $165). Learning Resources' inflatable solar system ($28 to $50) and Geosafari's motorized desktop planetarium ($40) are more kid-friendly. And if you want to give your child the moon, Uncle Milton would be only too happy to oblige with Moon in My Room ($20 to $30).

But enough about my ideas ... I'd love to hear yours. Between now and Monday, leave your science-gift suggestions as comments below. Please don't suggest electronic gear such as audio/video/phones, or video games or game devices. Those sorts of things are handled by other folks here at msnbc.com. Board games are OK, as long as they're geeky. The more creative the gift idea, the better.

I'll put together a collection of the best suggestions and put them up to a vote next week. The biggest vote-getter as of Dec. 2 will win a grab bag of geekiness, including the following books:

Due to the logistics and cost of mailing, the grab bag can be sent only to a U.S. address. I'll let you know about additional goodies next week. In the meantime, here are some websites and archived gift guides to get you inspired:

Previous Science Geek Gift Guides:

More sites for science gifts:


You don't need to buy me a present. All I ask is that you connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page or following @b0yle on Twitter.

Discuss this post

I want a few boxes of that unicorn meat from that geek something web site (its not a real sale but it would be so cool if it was)

    Reply#1 - Wed Nov 24, 2010 10:24 AM EST

    Hi alan-

     

    I think Benoit Mandelbrot did not get enough attention for dying this year. Fractals are about as geeky, and marvelous, as anything. I don't know whether there is a  Benoit-fractal-building kit or a Benoit t-shirt. But I think he embodies geekdom.

      Reply#2 - Wed Nov 24, 2010 1:09 PM EST

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        Reply#3 - Wed Nov 24, 2010 3:39 PM EST

        As the mother of two grown geeks, I would give both my sons a blast from a baby boomer's past: first editions of _The Golden Book of Chemistry Experiments_, originally copyrighted in 1960. It sold for $1.95, and it was later banned in many places because it taught children to create things such as mustard gas. A printed version of the book is difficult to find. (I kept checking it out of the school library, but my mother didn't allow chemical or biological experiments in her house.)

          Reply#4 - Thu Nov 25, 2010 1:18 AM EST

          I am in love with this shower curtain featuring the Periodic Table of the Elements: http://www.thinkgeek.com/homeoffice/gear/8a2f/ as well as the beryllium/erbium "Be|Er" T-shirt http://www.thinkgeek.com/tshirts-apparel/unisex/sciencemath/e62a/ from Think Geek. Way cool!

            Reply#5 - Thu Nov 25, 2010 7:53 AM EST
            johnny100Deleted

            How can any sushi-eating geek survive without a pair of light sabre chop sticks?

            http://www.thinkgeek.com/geektoys/japanfan/c50f/?pfm=rightcolumn_NewStuffFTW_1

            • 1 vote
            Reply#7 - Fri Nov 26, 2010 3:42 AM EST
            liulei123Deleted

            Neuroscience for everyone! Check out the SpikerBox, from Backyard Brains (www.backyardbrains.com). For $99.98 assembled, or $49.99 in kit form, you get a device that allows you to listen in on the firing of neurons in invertebrates. It's built by neuroscientists to help everyone appreciate the function of the nervous system. The SpikerBox provides audio, but it can feed a computer or some popular mobile phones for a visual display of neural activity. I'll have mine next week - Backyard Brains will sponsor a "Make and Take" - meet with the designers, build the box, and learn how to use it, all for less than the cost of the fully-assembled model.

              Reply#9 - Fri Nov 26, 2010 9:44 AM EST

              "Time flies like cow" a book about almost everything that brings a new outlook on favorites like quantum physics and time. It's also quite funny. ( available at amazon)

                Reply#10 - Fri Nov 26, 2010 12:22 PM EST

                "Time flies like cow" a book about almost everything that brings a new outlook on favorites like quantum physics and time. It's also quite funny. ( available at amazon)

                  Reply#11 - Fri Nov 26, 2010 12:25 PM EST

                  Periodic Table Toy Blocks - ABC blocks are so 1950's - you gotta get start your little genious early :)

                  http://www.coolest-toys.com/201010/periodic-table-building-blocks-%E2%80%93-you-gotta-get-em-young.htm

                    Reply#12 - Sat Nov 27, 2010 11:52 AM EST

                    What geek feels completely dressed without a mole day t-shirt? Celebrating Avogadro's number (6.02 x 10 to the 23rd power), mole day t-shirts are available online from https://www.orbromart.com/moleday/category_browse.php?cat=1. No, I don't have any affiliation with the website; I just think they're really cool.

                      Reply#13 - Sat Nov 27, 2010 12:35 PM EST

                      Assuming they don't already have it, a subscription to Make Magazine is a great geeky gift. Give Wired to the wannabe geeks.

                      A much more expensive option is the MakerBot Thing-O-Matic 3d printer: http://store.makerbot.com/makerbot-thing-o-matic.html. Short of a backyard nuclear power plant, it's the ultimate geek toy.

                        Reply#14 - Sun Nov 28, 2010 5:11 PM EST
                          Reply#15 - Mon Nov 29, 2010 3:00 PM EST
                          Reply

                          These people have so many geek presents it's not even funny. I got myself a disappearing TARDIS coffee mug. Now I can travel the universe in space and time with The Doctor every morning!

                          www.computergear.com

                          Sorry to hear about Benoit Mandlebrot. I didn't know he had died. He's the reason I love math!

                            Reply#16 - Tue Nov 30, 2010 2:57 PM EST
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