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The Science Show
ABC listen
249 episodes
2 days ago
The Science Show gives Australians unique insights into the latest scientific research and debate, from the physics of cricket to prime ministerial biorhythms.
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Natural Sciences
Science
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All content for The Science Show is the property of ABC listen and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The Science Show gives Australians unique insights into the latest scientific research and debate, from the physics of cricket to prime ministerial biorhythms.
Show more...
Natural Sciences
Science
Episodes (20/249)
The Science Show
Gene editing brings promise for genetic blood disorders
Small chemical groups inserted or removed from around DNA may affect gene expression and so be a way to control genetic blood disorders such as sickle cell anaemia and beta thalassemia. 
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10 hours ago
53 minutes 55 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: The native ants that take down cane toads
Meat ants don't sound like the most endearing Australian animals. These purple-red insects are super territorial, swarming and biting anything that threatens their nest.  But it turns out they're not just aggressive, flesh-tearing fighters. They're also farmers, architects, and — best of all — cane toad exterminators. 
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4 days ago
11 minutes 28 seconds

The Science Show
Back to the dark ages for American research?
Is the US shooting itself in the foot, or shooting itself in the head? As Donald Trump removes funding for medical research, climate research and more, Matthew England reflects on how science will help us cope with a changing world.
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1 week ago
54 minutes 25 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: How do I avoid eating and breathing microplastics?
It's impossible to escape microplastics. They're in our food and water, and the air around us is teeming with them. So considering they're all around us, how can we minimise our exposure to tiny plastic fragments without resorting to living in a cave?
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1 week ago
13 minutes 26 seconds

The Science Show
Climatic changes everywhere as the world’s oceans become hotter
A 100-yr flood is now a more regular occurrence in the German town of Passau, bringing widespread destruction, another local impact of a planet getting hotter.
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2 weeks ago
53 minutes 11 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: What's quantum mechanics ever done for me?
It feels like you can't go a week without hearing about some new quantum technology which promises to change our lives for the better.  But quantum mechanics is already well and truly present in our daily life — and you don't even have to be a physicist to be using it. 
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2 weeks ago
14 minutes

The Science Show
Tracing the 100-year history of quantum mechanics
There was a famous debate. And truly weird ideas about how the universe works at a subatomic level. Shelby Traynor traces the history of quantum mechanics.
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3 weeks ago
53 minutes 54 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: Why some mums have all boys or all girls
If you've given birth to three daughters, what are the odds that your next child will also be a girl? One in two, right? Well … maybe not. The odds of having a fourth girl could be a fair bit higher than 50 per cent, according to a new study into families with single-sex sets of siblings.
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3 weeks ago
14 minutes 20 seconds

The Science Show
Australia's forgotten inventor brothers
Discover the story of a pair of brothers who invented an early electric scooter, humidicrib, fax machine, Olympic scoreboard — and much more! — in their South Australian workshop from the 1930s to the 60s. We also learn about a trial that's generated energy from the waves, and unearth two rare photographs of a long-lost bandicoot species.
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4 weeks ago
41 minutes 56 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: Can bottom trawling be a sustainable way to fish?
A huge net, weighed down by heavy chains, swiftly sweeps across the ocean floor, scooping up everything in its path.  This type of fishing, called bottom trawling, was illuminated in a new documentary, Ocean with David Attenborough.  Bottom trawling is known for indiscriminately gathering all sorts of marine species, as well as damaging the sea floor.  But with the practice producing around a quarter of the world’s wild-caught seafood, are there ways to make it more sustainable? 
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1 month ago
14 minutes 2 seconds

The Science Show
The trees that harness lightning to kill their rivals
In an electrifying episode of the Science Show, find out how getting struck by a bolt from the heavens can help at least one species of tall tree not only survive, but thrive.  Then step back in time to solve a tool-making mystery in Samoa and discover hidden treasures in centuries-old books — including a bubonic plague flea.
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1 month ago
42 minutes 7 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: The telescope redefining the Universe
In the three years since the James Webb Space Telescope sent back its first images, it's pulled back the veil on a whole bunch of mind-blowing cosmic phenomena. So how has this $13 billion bit of kit shaped what we know about the Universe — and what is yet to come?
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1 month ago
12 minutes 50 seconds

The Science Show
What does it take to bring back an extinct animal?
We hear from scientists who push the boundaries of creation, whether that's building wild and wacky snack flavours (successfully) or cloning extinct tropical frogs (unsuccessfully … so far).  And since President Donald Trump retook office, the state of health and science research in the US has been precarious for many who work in those areas.  But there is a silver lining. Other countries such as Australia are implementing programs to recruit US researchers looking to relocate.
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1 month ago
40 minutes 47 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: What we can learn from the world’s cleanest air
We often hear about places where the air quality is bad, even dangerous, but what about where the air is the cleanest on Earth? That air can be found blowing onto the north-west tip of Tasmania at Kennaook/Cape Grim, where an air pollution station has quietly been keeping track of how humans have changed the makeup of our atmosphere for 50 years. So what does the world's cleanest air tell us?
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1 month ago
13 minutes 51 seconds

The Science Show
A portrait of philosopher Karl Popper
Karl Popper (1902-1994) is regarded as one of the greatest philosophers of science of the twentieth century. Alan Saunders presented this portrait of Karl Popper for The Science Show in January 2001.
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1 month ago
54 minutes 7 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: How Ozempic stops food cravings
A weekly injection that stops that hankering for hot chips and donuts? Many people on Ozempic and similar medications report this phenomenon, saying they no longer have incessant thoughts about sweets and fried food. So how do these drugs, known as GLP-1 agonists, work in the brain to dial down "food noise" and help people lose weight?
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1 month ago
11 minutes 52 seconds

The Science Show
Celebrating Charles Todd and the overland telegraph
The overland telegraph connecting Australia to the world was completed just over 150 years ago. It was built due to the dedication of a public servant, Charles Todd.
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1 month ago
54 minutes 7 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: The tiny beetle ravaging Perth's trees
It's the size of a sesame seed, but it could cause unfathomable destruction to Australia's forests and urban canopy. A beetle called the polyphagous shot-hole borer (Euwallacea fornicatus) is silently spreading through Perth and its surrounds, forcing councils to chop and chip hundreds of trees — even century-old Moreton Bay figs. So how does the tiny pest cause such massive problems?
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2 months ago
14 minutes 49 seconds

The Science Show
Professor Roger Short, reproductive biologist
Roger Short (1930_2021) discusses influences in his early life, and some of his research achievements including melatonin as a controller of circannual rhythms, and aspects of reproductive biology across the animal world.
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2 months ago
54 minutes 7 seconds

The Science Show
Lab Notes: What makes Sydney's cockies so clever?
First they learnt how to flip open wheelie bin lids. Now they're using water fountains. Masters of the urban landscape, sulphur-crested cockatoos (Cacatua galerita) are more than capable of some quirky (and sometimes messy) antics. So what do these entertaining exploits tell us about cockie innovation — or even cockie culture?
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2 months ago
14 minutes 35 seconds

The Science Show
The Science Show gives Australians unique insights into the latest scientific research and debate, from the physics of cricket to prime ministerial biorhythms.