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The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
ABC listen
250 episodes
9 hours 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 - Separate stories podcast 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 (20/250)
The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
The science behind weird and wonderful chip flavours
The humble crisp has come a long way since its invention more than 200 years ago. You can get them in flavours such as bolognese, cheeseburger and beef rendang … which taste uncannily like bolognese, cheeseburger, and beef rendang. So how are these complex flavours made, and how do food chemists get them tasting so close to the real deal?
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7 hours ago
12 minutes 16 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
How to bring a frog back from the dead … well, nearly
Nearly two decades ago, a small group of scientists in Australia came surprisingly close to resurrecting the extinct gastric brooding frog.  Hear from the scientists involved about the highs and lows of de-extinction efforts, and the challenges facing researchers today. 
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7 hours ago
15 minutes 27 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
A silver lining to US research funding woes
Since President Donald Trump retook office, the state of research in the States has been precarious for many, with billions of dollars of proposed cuts from science and health research. 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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7 hours ago
11 minutes 21 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Dogs help eradicate rats on Lord Howe Island
Pauline Newman meets biosecurity officer Brent Madden who explains how a dog’s obsession with tennis balls is used to elicit a desired behaviour.
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4 weeks ago
16 minutes 14 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Tim Entwisle – The Sceptical Botanist
Challenging ideas such as whether plants communicate and planting according to cycles of the moon - a healthy scepticism presented with hope and vision.  
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4 weeks ago
13 minutes 33 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Here comes Roger
Professor Marilyn Renfree describes the genius and spirit of her late husband reproductive biologist Roger Short.
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4 weeks ago
8 minutes 50 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
The uncanny valley of quantum
Get ready for gravitons, dark photons and altered transition states. Kathryn Zurek takes us on a tour of a bewildering world, our world, with us knowing so much, while at the same time, knowing so little.
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4 weeks ago
12 minutes 18 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Can we trust scientific papers?
Len Fisher tackles accusations that some scientific papers and some science books contain misinformation. How well are they checked? Are academics too busy or too few to monitor the work of others?
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1 month ago
7 minutes 39 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Do people have a place in wilderness?
In her book Beyond Green, Geographer Lesley Head argues that Indigenous presence in wilderness in Australia has existed in a balanced way. And Robyn is taken on a walking tour of the highlands around the Shoalhaven River in NSW by two Indigenous guides.
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1 month ago
39 minutes 43 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Antibiotic resistance – a surprising new source
It can come, not only from the indulgent use of drugs, but also from the exchange of genes within our own guts.
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1 month ago
10 minutes 27 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Volcano! Another book for children by prize-winning author Claire Saxby
Claire Saxby shows how the restless Earth can have fissures in its crust leading to huge explosions from deep in the sea, forming islands such as Hawaii whilst allowing thousands of living things to flourish under water.
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1 month ago
9 minutes 28 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Effects of early life adversity in marmots and humans
Long-term stress may have consequences. These are being studies in marmots and humans.
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1 month ago
12 minutes 2 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Marsupial reproduction - one at your feet, one in the pouch and one on standby!
The diapause, the suspension and then triggering of foetal development, has allowed Australian marsupials to battle the extreme environment with remarkable success.
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1 month ago
12 minutes 11 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Citizen scientists score major fossil find in Victoria
A group of amateur fossil hunters in Victoria has uncovered fossilised tracks left in a slab of mud, which have been dated as 35-40 million years older than the previously oldest known evidence of an early reptile.
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1 month ago
6 minutes 58 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Is it possible to stop aging?
David Walker of UCLA has studied aging for 30 years and thinks he now knows how it happens and, at least in fruit flies, how to reverse it.
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1 month ago
11 minutes 10 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Two tertiary students and an artist combine learning and creativity
Jonathan Davis, Zofia Witkovsky-Blake and Jessie French discuss their lives as tertiary students combining their interests spanning science and the arts.
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1 month ago
30 minutes 19 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Gus Nossal reflects and launches a new research chair
Australia’s eminent immunologist Gus Nossal is 94 and ailing but as enthusiastic as ever for the prospects for research.
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1 month ago
10 minutes 58 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
Happy 99th birthday to a Science Show friend
David Attenborough describes one of his favourite birds, Birds-of-paradise with their golden crests.
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2 months ago
9 minutes 26 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
The amazing work of dung beetles
Dung beetles were introduced to Australia to clean up after cattle. Rhiân Williams describes the lives and work of dung beetles in her book for younger readers, One Little Dung Beetle.
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2 months ago
13 minutes 58 seconds

The Science Show - Separate stories podcast
A tour of Cockatoo Island – and its hotels for marine creatures
Cockatoo Island in Sydney Harbour has a rich Indigenous history, the one-time industrial site is now a nature reserve and function centre.
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2 months ago
16 minutes 20 seconds

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