wow very big question – if you’re talking about GCSE – it would be the basics of Physics, Chemistry and Biology, as you go deeper into the area of science you learn more and more – Science has a huge breadth and many area of specialties that you can study – e.g at Uni you can then go onto to anything from pharmacology, forensic science or environmental science to marine biology, genetics or zoology to astrophysics, geophysics or theoretical physics.
Like Amal says – there are LOADS of things you can study in science. I specifically study lots of different bits of science in my job. I use parts of chemistry (chemistry of the environment, like the chemistyr of air, water, soil), geography (mostly glaciers and maps), geology (rocks and their chemistry), hydrology (which is the study of water and how it moves through the world). So the type of science I do uses a big mixture of science types to study the natural world – because in nature everything (chemistry, biology, physics) is connected!
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