Tunnelling Under London

Tunnelling Under London

How do you dig a 26 mile tunnel beneath a city and below the water table? This week we drop in on Crossrail, who are busy constructing a new commuter line below the UK capital, to discover how massive tunnels are made in the modern era. Plus, we take a walk along the World's first and oldest tunnel built below a river to hear how it was made, and we find out what present-day tunnelling is turning up of London's past. Also, news of a drug that can repair the brain damage done by multiple sclerosis, and a planet found floating alone in interstellar space... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists

Avsnitt(1248)

Microbiome links to Parkinson's, and a massive laser boost

Microbiome links to Parkinson's, and a massive laser boost

This week scientists confirm the link between changes to the microbiome and later development of Parkinson's Disease, a super speedy microfluidic way to diagnose infection and probe antibiotic suscept...

24 Apr 32min

What is flooding? And how do we tackle it?

What is flooding? And how do we tackle it?

We dive into the science and impact of flooding and coastal change. In partnership with UK Research and Innovation, this podcast explores what flooding is, how we measure tides, the dangers flooding p...

21 Apr 28min

Alzheimer's drugs & tackling HIV

Alzheimer's drugs & tackling HIV

This week, we look at UK Alzheimer's drugs and the latest debate over whether new treatments are a genuine breakthrough or overhyped, alongside a striking HIV case from Oslo that has raised fresh ques...

17 Apr 30min

Oil, gas & what comes next

Oil, gas & what comes next

This week, we are exploring the oil and gas industry, literally from the ground up: what's the geology of oil formation, how does a petrochemist go from crude to highly refined, can the UK solve its e...

14 Apr 33min

Space travel alters the body, and chronic pain on the mind

Space travel alters the body, and chronic pain on the mind

This week, we find out how space travel is likely to affect the bodies of the Artemis II astronauts. Plus, how conflict and other adverse events during childhood influence young lives, what is the lin...

10 Apr 34min

What is time?

What is time?

Time waits for no one, but what exactly is it? Is it just a human construct, or something far deeper, flowing through our minds and bodies? In this episode, we examine the very fabric of time: how we ...

7 Apr 33min

Artemis II launch, and tackling physical inactivity

Artemis II launch, and tackling physical inactivity

Artemis II begins its mission to take humans farther into space than ever before, scientists in London unveil the first lab-grown oesophagus, the dangers of physical inactivity and why we urgently nee...

3 Apr 34min

Nature frozen in time

Nature frozen in time

Across our planet, natural archives preserve the biological footprints of species long gone, from woolly mammoths at the macro scale, through plants and seeds, to dormant bacteria and viruses at the m...

31 Mars 29min

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