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BBC Inside Science

Antarctica weather and climate change; GM Fish Oils; Melanin Fossils; Time Travel

BBC Inside Science

BBC

Technology, Science

4.51.3K Ratings

🗓️ 9 January 2014

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Scientists following in the footsteps of Edwardian explorer, Douglas Mawson, have been trapped in pack ice in the Antarctic. The Chinese vessel that came to their rescue also became "beset" in the ice. The BBC's Andrew Luck Baker talks to Adam Rutherford about the catacylsmic event that caused multi-year ice to break away and trap the Academik Shokalskiy and Professor John Turner of the British Antarctic Survey underlines the importance of differentiating between extreme weather events and the impact of climate change.

A team at Rothamsted Research in Hertfordshire has succeeded in genetically engineering plant seeds to contain the Omega-3 oil usually found in oily fish. Seeds from Camelina sativa (false flax) plants were modified using genes from microalgae - the primary organisms that produce these beneficial fatty acids.The oil has now been incorporated into salmon feed to assess whether it's a viable alternative to wild fish oil. Dr Johnathan Napier tells Melissa Hogenboom that he hopes the plants will provide a sustainable source of long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids.

From fossils we know an awful lot about the animals that walked on the Earth, swam in the sea and flew in the air. But fossils have never been good at revealing the colour of these animals. With increasingly sophisticated sampling techniques however, scientists are starting to get a much better, technicolour glimpse into these extinct fauna. And it turns out that colour played a much more important role than just camouflage and decoration. Johan Lindgren form Lund University in Sweden has been finding out how the pigment, melanin, allowed ancient marine reptiles to travel all over the oceanic globe.

Show Us Your Instrument: Dr Andrew Polaszek, Head of Terrestrial Invertebrates at the Natural History Museum reveals his compound microscope (with Nomarski Differential Interference Contrast) which he uses to discover "hidden biodiversity", particularly in parasitoid wasps.

Stephen Hawking threw a party for time travellers and issued the invitation after the event. Astrophysicists after a long poker game decided to use Twitter instead, to flush out the time travellers in our midst. Professor Robert Nemiroff from Michigan Tech University and his students mined social media for references to the Comet ISON and the naming of the new Pope Francis, before both those events had actually happened.

Producer: Fiona Hill.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Choosing what to watch night after night the flicking through the endless

0:06.8

searching is a nightmare we want to help you on our brand new podcast off the

0:11.8

telly we share what we've been watching

0:14.0

Cladie Aide.

0:16.0

Load to games, loads of fun, loads of screaming.

0:19.0

Lovely. Off the telly with me Joanna Paige.

0:21.0

And me, Natalie Cassidy, so your evenings can be a little less

0:24.9

searching and a lot more watching listen on BBC sounds.

0:29.1

Hello you I'm Adam Rutherford and this is the first BBC Inside Science Podcast of 2014.

0:35.5

Happy New Year science fans, terms and conditions at BBC.co.

0:38.8

UK slash radio4.

0:41.6

Regular listeners will know that we've been tracking the story of scientists and their Antarctic

0:45.4

adventures since before Christmas.

0:47.6

Led by Professor Chris Turnie, a team of researchers, have been retracing the steps of the

0:52.1

intrepid Edwardian pioneer Douglas Morrison, a century after

0:56.0

his scientific endeavors around the southern pole. Well, it hasn't gone entirely according to

1:00.9

plan. As you probably heard, the research vessel Academic Schokalski

1:05.0

was trapped, beset in ice in the jargon,

1:07.6

on Christmas Eve, and on the 2nd of January,

1:10.4

the passengers were dramatically rescued on the helicopter from the Chinese ship

1:14.0

Xu Long and flown to the icebreaker Aurora Australis. The

1:18.5

Xu Long then became frozen in creeping ice as well. One of the rescued passengers was Radio 4's Andrew Luck Baker

...

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