What Alaska’s eroding coastline says about Earth’s future, and how Yellowstone ravens use their smarts to find wolf kills

What Alaska’s eroding coastline says about Earth’s future, and how Yellowstone ravens use their smarts to find wolf kills

First up on the podcast, freelance journalist Evan Howell traveled to Cape Blossom, Alaska, where the receding coastline has revealed an ancient trove of glacial ice that may have survived for 350,000 years—making it the oldest ice in the Northern Hemisphere. Now researchers just need to figure out how to date it. Next on the show, tracking wolves and ravens in Yellowstone National Park shows the birds don’t follow the wolves in hope of a meal, but instead remember and revisit frequent wolf kill sites. Matthias-Claudio Loretto, assistant professor in the Research Institute of Wildlife Ecology at the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna, discusses how this might change the way we think about scavengers’ strategies for finding their ephemeral food sources. Finally, Claire Bedbrook, the Helen Hay Whitney and Wu Tsai neuroscience postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University, discusses her work tracking African turquoise killifish over their life span. By capturing behaviors over the course of the fish’s entire lives, her team was able to observe behaviors that could be used to predict whether a fish would live a short or long life. This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy. About the Science Podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Blood tests for Alzheimer’s disease, and what earthquakes on Mars reveal about the Red Planet’s core

Blood tests for Alzheimer’s disease, and what earthquakes on Mars reveal about the Red Planet’s core

First this week, Associate Editor Kelly Servick joins us to discuss a big push to develop scalable blood tests for Alzheimer’s disease and how this could advance research on the disease and its treatm...

22 Juli 202126min

Science after COVID-19, and a landslide that became a flood

Science after COVID-19, and a landslide that became a flood

First this week, Staff Writer Jennifer Couzin-Frankel joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss a new series on how COVID-19 may alter the scientific enterprise and they look back at how pandemics have catal...

15 Juli 202125min

Scientists’ role in the opioid crisis, 3D-printed candy proteins, and summer books

Scientists’ role in the opioid crisis, 3D-printed candy proteins, and summer books

First this week, Editor-in-Chief Holden Thorp talks with author Patrick Radden Keefe about his book Empire of Pain and the role scientists, regulators, and physicians played in the rollout of Oxyconti...

8 Juli 202141min

Preserving plastic art, and a gold standard for measuring extreme pressure

Preserving plastic art, and a gold standard for measuring extreme pressure

First this week, Contributing Correspondent Sam Kean talks with producer Joel Goldberg about techniques museum conservators are using to save a range of plastic artifacts—from David Bowie costumes to ...

1 Juli 202139min

Does Botox combat depression, the fruit fly sex drive, and a series on race and science

Does Botox combat depression, the fruit fly sex drive, and a series on race and science

First this week, Contributing Correspondent Cathleen O’Grady talks with host Sarah Crespi about controversy surrounding the use of Botox injections to alleviate depression by suppressing frowning. Ne...

24 Juni 202132min

Keeping ads out of dreams, and calculating the cost of climate displacement

Keeping ads out of dreams, and calculating the cost of climate displacement

First this week, News Intern Sofia Moutinho joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss scientists concerns about advertisers looking into using our smart speakers or phones to whisper ads to us while we sleep...

17 Juni 202123min

Finding consciousness outside the brain, and using DNA to reunite families

Finding consciousness outside the brain, and using DNA to reunite families

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

10 Juni 202128min

Cicada citizen science, and expanding the genetic code

Cicada citizen science, and expanding the genetic code

First this week, freelance journalist Ian Graber-Stiehl discusses what might be the oldest community science project—observing the emergence of periodical cicadas. He also notes the shifts in how amat...

3 Juni 202138min

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