Boeke, Kees,
Cosmic View: The Universe in Fourty Jumps
, New York: John Day Company, 1957. The origin of the tenfold journey; the book was made with and for children of junior-high-school age, but its appeal is wide.
Burton, Virginia Lee,
Life Story,
Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1962. A book on evolution at a single location over time; a sort of
Powers of Ten
in time, for younger children
Calder, Nigel,
Timescale
, New York: Viking Press, 1982. A tenfolding voyage through time.
Codogan, Peter,
From Quark to Quasar,
London: Cambridge University Press, 1985. An attempt to scale the size of the Universe from man to the smallest and to the largest. Each power of ten is illustrated. A terrific book!
Morrison, Philip and Phylis, and The Office of Charles and Ray Eames,
Powers of Ten,
About the Relative Size of Things in the Universe, Scientific American Books, 1982. A great book on scaling the relative size of things in the universe; well illustrated.