Science On Top   /     Air Sea'n'Sea

Description

Hosts: Ed Brown, Penny Dumsday, Lucas Randall 00:00:28 An Australian research team has come up with a luxurious plan to save endangered seahorses. 00:04:54 A more precise method of determining the methane produced by human activities draws a timeline of industrialisation. 00:15:07 Remains dating back 65,000 years ago demonstrate that the earliest Australians enjoyed slow-cooking. 00:20:28 Have you thought about the environmental impact your death and burial or cremation will have? There could be more planet-friendly options when it comes to 'deathcare'. This episode contains traces of Bill Gates, speaking to Vox four years ago, about his greatest fear.

Summary

A luxurious plan to save seahorses, precise methane measurements, 65,000 year old food and the environmental impact of dying.

Subtitle
Hosts: Ed Brown, Penny Dumsday, Lucas Randall 00:00:28 An Australian research team has come up with a luxurious plan . 00:04:54 A more precise method of determining the methane produced by human activities . 00:15:07 Remains dating back 65,000 years...
Duration
31:19
Publishing date
2020-03-20 10:05
Link
https://scienceontop.com/351
Contributors
Enclosures
http://traffic.libsyn.com/science/SoT_0351.mp3?dest-id=62274
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

Hosts: Ed Brown, Penny Dumsday, Lucas Randall 00:00:28 An Australian research team has come up with a luxurious plan to save endangered seahorses. 00:04:54 A more precise method of determining the methane produced by human activities draws a timeline of industrialisation. 00:15:07 Remains dating back 65,000 years ago demonstrate that the earliest Australians enjoyed slow-cooking. 00:20:28 Have you thought about the environmental impact your death and burial or cremation will have? There could be more planet-friendly options when it comes to 'deathcare'.

This episode contains traces of Bill Gates, speaking to Vox four years ago, about his greatest fear.