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The Common Descent Podcast

Common Descent

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Join David and Will as they explore the paleontologists’ perspective on various topics in life and earth history. Each episode features a main discussion on a topic requested by the listeners, presented as a lighthearted and educational conversation about fossils, evolution, deep time, and more. Before the main discussion, each episode also includes a news segment, covering recent research related to paleontology and evolution. Each episode ends with the answer to a question submitted by sub ...
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FUTURE FOSSILS

Michael Garfield

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Join paleontologist-futurist Michael Garfield and an avalanche of amazing guests for deep but irreverent discussions at the edge of the known and knowable: on prehistory and post-humanity and deep time, non-human agency and non-duality, science fiction and self-fulfilling prophecies, complex systems and sustainability (or lack thereof), psychedelics as a form of training for proliferating futures, art and creativity as service and as inquiry. New episodes on a roughly biweekly basis. Get bon ...
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Did you know a new dinosaur is discovered almost every week? Keep up with the latest dinosaur discoveries and science with I Know Dino. Have fun and relax with hosts Garret and Sabrina each week as they explore the latest dinosaur news, chat with paleontology experts, dive deep into a “dinosaur of the day,” go down Oryctodromeus burrows with their fun facts, answer your burning questions, and connect dinosaurs to topics ranging from chocolate to the Titanic and more! Educational and entertai ...
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Past Time

Matt Borths, Adam Pritchard, Catherine Early

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Past Time is a podcast that explores how we know what we know about the past. There's a special focus on the fossil record - it is hosted by two paleontologists - but delving into the story of the past isn't limited to dry bones. Today's paleontologists use techniques drawn from other sciences including Physics, Chemistry, Geology, and Biology to figure out what extinct animals were like and how they lived. Whether you are just starting to learn about the amazing animals that have called thi ...
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Paleo Bites

Matthew Donald

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Welcome to Paleo Bites, the weekly podcast hosted by Matthew Donald where we make dumb jokes, reference pop culture, derail like crazy, and oh yeah, discuss and rate dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals. Each episode Matthew and a rotating set of guest co-hosts talk about a different genus of primeval critter, explain basic stats, exchange plenty of banter, barely fact-check, and at the end, rate the creature one out of 65 million for any reason, including but not limited to sexiness, man ...
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Indian Genes

Joaquim Gonsalves

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Indian Genes is committed to bringing in ideas and thoughts from Global leaders in their field to every listener and home, with the intention of providing free and easy access to this information to all that would want to continue their quest for continuous learning. We also are very focused on our young talent that would benefit from this exposure as they plan and move ahead in the careers and life path, hopefully inspiring them to greater heights and clarity in thought that builds both cha ...
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Science News Daily

brief.news

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Welcome to Science News Daily, brought to you by Brief! Our AI selects the latest stories and top headlines and then delivers them to you each day in less than ten minutes (for more details, visit www.brief.news/how-it-works). Tune in to get your daily news on fascinating topics, including physics, biology, chemistry, astronomy, and more. Whether you're a science enthusiast, researcher, or simply curious about the wonders of the natural world, this podcast is your ultimate source for all thi ...
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Locked deep beneath The Museum is...The Museum's Shadow! Inside this secret, trapdoored cellar is an exhibition filled with artifacts, fossils and thick cobwebs. Some artifacts are brought into the light on Twitter: @museumsshadow
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NOVA | PBS

WGBH Science Unit

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NOVA brings you short audio stories from the world of science -- anything from hurricanes to mummies to neutrinos. For more science programming online and on air, visit NOVA's Web site at pbs.org/nova, or watch NOVA broadcasts Wednesday nights on PBS.
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NOVA Vodcast | PBS

WGBH Science Unit

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NOVA brings you short video stories from the world of science, including excerpts from our television programs, video dispatches from producers and correspondents in the field, animations, and much more. For more science programming online and on air, visit NOVA's Web site at http://www.pbs.org/nova and watch NOVA broadcasts Wednesday nights on PBS. Please note that this feed requires QuickTime 7. Free upgrade available at apple.com/itunes.
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”Crude Conversations” features guests who represent a different aspect of Alaska. Follow along as host Cody Liska takes a contemporary look at what it means to be an Alaskan. Support and subscribe at www.patreon.com/crudemagazine and www.buymeacoffee.com/crudemagazine
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Where We Go Next

Michael Callahan

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Visionary founders, best-selling writers, award-winning journalists, acclaimed educators, innovative artists. Where We Go Next is a podcast focused on in-depth conversations with the people changing the ways we think, create, and live.
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Snake Talk

Dr. Chris Jenkins

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Faced with a world that instinctually persecutes snakes, Dr. Jenkins talks with the foremost experts on snake biology and conservation. The discussions range widely including topics such as snake ecology, snakebites, and captive breeding. All of the conversations have the same goal, to help the listener increase their knowledge and leave behind any irrational fears of snakes.
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Not Another Science Podcast is brought to you by Edinburgh University Science Media, or EUSci. Join our hosts Kelsey Tetley-Campbell and Katie Pickup as they talk to staff and students about all the fascinating research and projects happening around Scotland. Intrigued by sourdough? Passionate about climate change? Love to keep it science? Then this is the show for you. Podcast logo by Apple Chew and episode art by Elizabeth Carmichael. Get in touch at eusci.podcast@gmail.com, @euscimedia on ...
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Big Questions From Small Minds

Big Questions from Small Minds

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Big Questions from Small Minds is a fun, weekly science podcast for curious kids and their grown-ups, where kids ask big-brained science professors curly questions about how the world works. The answers are broken down to be fun, engaging and often silly! Hosted by Tom Norton and Phil Wolf, who are two dads with little minds, so they’re perfect for the job. With loads of curiosity and laughs, the show makes big ideas accessible for little minds. For more information, visit smallminds.au
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Information to strengthen your faith using scientific discoveries that prove the Bible to be true. Join author, TV host, and researcher David Rives as he explores infinite wonders that point us directly to our Creator, the God of the Bible. We are special, created in God’s own image. We are not mere animals, the result of evolution, natural selection, or chance and time. David is one of the foremost authorities on Origins Science and as he interviews Ph.D. scholars, he breaks it down into ea ...
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They Did That

Sony Music Entertainment

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Who built the modern world? The answer to that question might surprise you. (Or maybe not...) There's a long list of global innovators and trailblazers who haven't gotten their due in the history books because of who they were; women, people of color, LGBTQ+ and more. Each week They Did That tells one of these people's stories and how their life’s work has changed our lives for the better. Hosted by Takara Small. A Sony Music Entertainment production. Find more great podcasts from Sony Music ...
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The Books of Thoth

Sam McDonald

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The god of wisdom holds many books with his great library. Unfurl the papyrus, and breathe in the ancient scent. Come with us as we explore the stories contained within The Books of Thoth. The Books of Thoth is an audio drama anthology podcast. You will explore tales of the past, the future, and even alternate realities. Every book in Thoth’s library has a story to tell. Let’s go find some, shall we?
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What did the very first animals look like? Pretty weird, apparently. PhD student Ruaridh Alexander is studying the fossils of the earliest animals to understand how they evolved on the cusp of the Cambrian explosion, a period over 500 million years ago where the diversity of animal life suddenly skyrocketed. Ruaridh tells us about the average day o…
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Harrison Duran is a field paleontologist whose popular social media accounts document his preparation and excavation in the American West. His videography and storytelling convey the work and skill required by paleontology, as well as its significance to our understanding of the natural world. Species which he has excavated and prepared include Tri…
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Join Dr. Jenkins as he sits down with Dr. Michael Caldwell, a professor at the University of Alberta, to discuss their recent media-highlighted discovery of 38-million-year-old snake fossils in Wyoming. Their in-depth conversation starts with the surprising discovery of an early snake fossil in an Israeli museum, challenging our understanding of sn…
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Welcome ... to Spookulative Evolution. October is Spook-E Season on Common Descent! Each episode, we pick monsters from fiction and fable and ponder how they – or something like them – could evolve here on Earth, pulling inspiration from real-world species across our planet’s history. This year’s theme is Tiny Monsters. This episode, we’ve chosen a…
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(0:10): Timing of Blood Samples Crucial for Accurate Dementia Diagnosis, Study Finds (2:02): AI Unveils Record-Breaking Triple Star System in Cygnus, Sparks New Astronomical Insights (4:19): Breakthrough Liquid Biopsy Techniques Hold Promise for Early Pancreatic Cancer Detection (7:00): Myopia Epidemic: Half the World Facing Vision Loss by 2050, Ex…
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In this episode, Dr. Chris Jenkins sits down with Dr. Bryan Hamilton and Colton Irons to explore one of his favorite species—the Great Basin Rattlesnake. Dr. Jenkins spent nearly a decade studying this species in the Upper Snake River Plain of Idaho, while Bryan and Colton focus on the same species in a vastly different environment—high-altitude mo…
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(0:10): Breakthrough: Complete Wiring Map of Fruit Fly Brain Unveiled, Paving Way for Human Brain Research (2:16): Discovery of Barnard b: New Exoplanet Found Just 6 Light-Years Away (4:23): New Study Uncovers Gamma-Ray Glows and Flashes in Tropical Storms, Redefining Lightning Theories (6:46): New Hope for AMD: Key Protein Discovery Could Halt Vis…
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Welcome to Spotlight 2024! In this series, we’re sitting down with our fellow paleo-podcasters to discuss Science Communication. This episode, we’re joined by one of the longest-running paleo-podcast hosts around: Dave Marshall from Palaeocast! Find Palaeocast here: https://www.palaeocast.com/ Connect with Common Descent: https://linktr.ee/common_d…
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(0:10): Breakthrough Headset Accurately Assesses Stroke Risk with Noninvasive Blood Flow Analysis (2:30): NASA's James Webb Telescope Unveils Frozen CO2 and Hydrogen Peroxide on Pluto's Moon Charon (4:17): Chitosan-Based Materials Revolutionize Cadmium Clean-Up in Water: Study Reveals Breakthrough in Environmental Management (6:44): Urgent Action N…
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Spinosaurids had powerful enough jaws and teeth to go after large prey, just not sharp enough to take out bites. Plus, more on the aquatic spinosaurs debate, and more spinosaur updates. For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Tachiraptor, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Tachiraptor-Episode-514/ Join us at …
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Bertrand Cooper is a writer and education professional based in Los Angeles. Drawing on twenty six years of deprivation and a Master's in Education Theory and Policy, his writing explores the depictions of poverty in society. Who Actually Gets to Create Black Pop Culture?, by Bertrand Cooper I Escaped Poverty, But Hunger Still Haunts Me, by Bertran…
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(0:10): SpaceX Launches Rescue Mission Amid ISS Leak Concerns; Astronauts' Return Delayed Until February (2:01): Johns Hopkins Develops Breakthrough Breath Test for Rapid, Accurate Diagnosis of Respiratory Infections (4:33): Gold Nanoparticles Revolutionize Cancer Treatment: Enhancing Photothermal and Electrochemotherapy Efficiency (7:01): Health C…
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(image source: https://www.deviantart.com/willemsvdmerwe/art/Anteosaurus-340867141) Host Matthew Donald and guest co-host Stephen Curro discuss Anteosaurus, a really big stem mammal that ate and chomped and crawled and stomped all over. At least, I assume it did. We don’t really know, it could have moved exclusively via unicycle. From the Late Perm…
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(0:10): Breakthrough Study Optimizes High-Entropy Alloys for Enhanced Soft Magnetic and Mechanical Properties (2:33): Revolutionizing Energy Storage: The Future of Bio-PCMs from Bacon Fat to Net-Zero Buildings (4:21): Microplastics Found in Human Brain: Urgent Call for Global Action on Plastic Pollution (6:25): Long COVID Affects Over 77 Million Gl…
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John Bucher is a renowned mythologist and story expert who has been featured on the BBC, the History Channel, the LA Times, The Hollywood Reporter and on numerous other international outlets . He serves as Executive Director for the Joseph Campbell Foundation and is a writer, podcaster, storyteller, and speaker. He has worked with government and cu…
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Our fungal celebration continues! The relationship between fungi and plants is one of the most famous and consequential connections in biological history. This episode, Aly is here to help us explore how fungi and plants work together and work against each other, what we know about the deep history of their relationship, and how fungi and plants to…
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(0:10): New Earth-Like Planet Offers Glimpse into Earth's Future Post-Sun Evolution (2:07): Primordial Black Holes May Reveal Dark Matter Secrets Through Mars' Orbital Wobbles, Study Finds (4:18): Early Ofatumumab Treatment Dramatically Reduces Disability in MS Patients, Study Shows (6:47): Scientists Confirm Linus Pauling's 1931 Theory: First Stab…
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(0:10): DNA Solves 1845 Franklin Expedition Mystery: Captain Fitzjames' Remains Identified, Cannibalism Confirmed (2:10): Low Withdrawal Risk: High-Dose Buprenorphine Shows Promise in Combating Fentanyl Crisis (4:19): Ancient Jaw Evolution: New Study Challenges Mammalian Ancestry Theories (6:17): UCLA Study Unveils How Brain Cells Encode Time and P…
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(0:10): Nanotech Revolution: Silver and Chitosan Nanoparticles Boost Antimicrobial Dental and Wound Care (2:09): James Webb Telescope Uncovers Atmospheric Asymmetry on Unique Exoplanet WASP-107b (4:11): Breakthrough High-Entropy Alloy Coatings Boost Hardness, Wear, and Corrosion Resistance for Industrial Applications (6:30): Space Study Reveals Ala…
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Juvenile Daspletosaurus skull bones; Modern birds have high Encephalization Quotients from their non-avian dinosaur ancestors; Dinosaur size estimate problems; Plus new non-fiction dinosaur books For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Suzhousaurus, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Suzhousaurus-Episode-513/…
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Last month we mentioned that legendary palaeontologist Mike Benton had announced his retirement, but with a few quick emails, Dave was able to grab him for this month’s episode. So, join Dave and Iszi as we have celebration of Mike’s career and take him through his early interest in palaeontology, how he got his PhD, the death of Al Romer, rhynchos…
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(0:10): Breakthrough in Early Alzheimer's Detection: Blood-Based Biomarkers Show Promise (2:09): AI Unveils 303 New Nazca Geoglyphs, Doubling Known Total in Record Time (4:04): Revolutionary MT-Net Model Boosts Lung Nodule Detection with 91.9% Accuracy Using EfficientUNetViT (6:16): Breakthrough in DNA Editing: Enhanced TnpB Cuts Cholesterol by 80%…
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Mike Livingston specializes in the cultural heritage of the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands. His background makes him uniquely qualified for this position. He grew up in Cold Bay, Alaska, located on the Aleutians, and his family homesteaded where Trout Creek flows into Cold Bay. He says they didn’t have much money, so they lived a subsistence lifesty…
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Salomé Sibonex is a writer, artist, and co-founder of The Black Sheep, a publication that frees people to take the path less traveled. She's given talks at FreedomFest and LibertyCon on how creative freedom allows us all to forge our own path—if we dare. The Black Sheep Ground News gathers news coverage from around the world, empowers free thinking…
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(image source: https://prehistoria.fandom.com/es/wiki/Dakotadon) Host Matthew Donald and guest co-host Ben O’Regan discuss Dakotadon, also known as the genus name that usurped the North American species of Iguanodon and thus any work featuring a North American Iguanodon retroactively is this. Hey, Aladar? You’re a Dakotadon now. Take all the time y…
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This week on Future Fossils, I meet with the wonderful Tim Adalin of Voicecraft. Watch us get to know each other a little bit better on a swapcast (his edit here) that throws a long loop around the world. Tim is precisely the kind of thoughtful investigator I love to encounter in conversation. Enjoy! ✨ Support This Work • Buy my brain for hourly co…
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(0:10): Study Reveals Inaccuracies in Low-Cost Indoor Air Quality Monitors, Urges Rigorous Testing (2:27): Novel Cold-Adapted Probiotic Fights Pseudomonas, Promises Safer Food and Drug Preservation (5:01): Breakthrough Coating Protects Cultural Heritage Limestone from Erosion and Bacteria (7:06): 3D-Printed Dental Crowns Outperform Traditional Meth…
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Mini-episodes are rewards for our high-level supporters on Patreon, each one focusing on a requested topic for a specific Patron. From time to time, we combine a bunch of these and release them as a bundle for all our listeners to enjoy. Enjoy! A huge thanks as always to our Patrons for their kind contributions to our education efforts. Intro: 00:0…
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That’s right, we’re back mother*****rs! In season two of Daily News Weekly, get your ears ravaged with studio guests like Donald Trump, Joe Biden and The Queen of England. Indulge in exotic topics like stealing candy from babies, artificial intelligence and artisan Japanese toothpick-making. Ravage your mind with shocking stories of alien abduction…
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The gang looks at two papers that compare similar structures in unrelated animals to see if there might be evidence of convergence. The first paper compares Spinosaurus to phytosaurs and the second paper compares the hyoid bone of ichthyosaurs and toothed whales. Meanwhile, Curt will try it, James waits for something that never happens, and Amanda …
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(0:10): NASA's 'Hidden Figures' Honored with Congressional Gold Medals at U.S. Capitol Ceremony (1:54): Breakthroughs in Gas Sensing: 2D Materials and Metal Oxides Revolutionize Detection Technology (4:16): Breakthrough Study Links Enlarged Brain Network to Depression, Offering New Treatment Insights (6:26): Ancient Martian Atmosphere Model Unveils…
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In this episode, Dr. Jenkins sits down with Dr. Rich Seigel of Towson University, a leading figure in reptile ecology. Rich's work, including books that greatly influenced Chris' path as a snake ecologist, is explored along with his journey from New York City to the swamps of the South and Midwest, and finally to Towson. The discussion highlights t…
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(0:10): DRC at the Epicenter: 22,000 Mpox Cases Amid Vaccine Shortages and Rising Miscarriage Rates (2:17): Groundbreaking Study Finds Microplastics in Human Brain Tissue, Raising Health Concerns and Calls for Global Action (4:24): Metformin Lowers Long COVID Risk, Major Study Finds (6:24): Global Stroke Surge Linked to Air Pollution and Heat: Urge…
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(0:10): Historic Polaris Dawn Mission: First Commercial Spacewalk and Southernmost Splashdown Achieved (2:03): Earth to Gain Temporary Second Moon: Asteroid 2024 PT5 to Orbit in Late 2024 (4:03): Early Humans Drove Cyprus's Dwarf Hippos and Elephants to Extinction 14,000 Years Ago (5:51): Hyundai Bioscience and UCSD Join Forces to Tackle Long-COVID…
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The sauropodomorph Lufengosaurus appears to have fed its young. Plus two new dinosaurs, a ceratopsian and a titanosaur; Plateosaurus tail injuries; and the connection between the bubonic plague and dinosaurs. For links to every news story, all of the details we shared about Saichania, and our fun fact check out https://iknowdino.com/Saichania-Episo…
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Indian Genes speaks to Michael about the brain basis of consciousness. Brains arrive at the conclusion that they have an internal, subjective experience of things — an experience that is non-physical and inexplicable. How can such a thing be studied scientifically? When an information-processing device such as the brain introspects, or accesses int…
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Adele chats with special guest Sally Hurst about the Found a Fossil project and what to do if you think you found an ancient relic or archaeological artefact in Australia! Sally shares what it was like growing up in rural New South Wales, working at the National Dinosaur Museum, and how her love of archaeology, ancient Egypt and dinosaurs led her t…
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(0:10): AI Outshines 75% of Human Students in Biomedical Course, Sparking Concerns Over Academic Integrity and Learning Effectiveness (2:03): Revolutionary Origami-Inspired Soft Robot Set to Transform Disaster Response, Medical Delivery, and Environmental Monitoring (4:07): New Breakthrough Study Enhances Language Preservation in Brain Surgery (6:2…
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(image source: https://www.deviantart.com/fish98/art/Antipodes-Quinkana-Concept-969634441) Host Matthew Donald and guest co-host Natasha Krech discuss Quinkana, a galloping terrestrial crocodile from Australia, because why wouldn’t this be a thing? Especially on that continent, AKA Death World. From the Late Miocene to the Late Pleistocene, this 13…
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(0:10): Herbal Solutions Boost Nile Tilapia Health: Study Reveals Benefits of EOA and PAM in Sustainable Aquaculture (2:07): Rising Diabetes Rates Tied to Female Infertility: The Role of Blood Sugar and AGEs (4:24): High VTE Risk in Lung Cancer: Study Urges New Assessment Scores and Treatment Strategies (6:41): Eco-Friendly Solvents Achieve Over 90…
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Here it is! The most requested episode topic in the history of the podcast! Fungi are everywhere. This episode, we explore how fungi work, what makes them different from other organisms, and how they achieve a wide variety of lifestyles all over the world. We’ll also look back at their evolutionary history and fossil record to explore some of the m…
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(0:10): Greenland Glacier Collapse Triggers Unprecedented 9-Day Tsunami and Seismic Event (2:00): Rare Southern Aurora Borealis: Solar Storms Illuminate Skies as Far South as 40 Degrees Latitude (3:50): Semaglutide Slashes Cardiovascular Deaths and COVID-19 Risks in Obese Patients: Study Reveals Promising Findings (5:43): Metabolomics Uncovers Plan…
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(0:10): NASA's Starliner Overcomes Engine Failure and Extreme Conditions in Crucial Test Flight (2:09): Eco-Friendly Adhesives and Advanced Sorbents Lead the Way in Tackling Environmental Pollutants (4:07): Novo Nordisk's New Weight Loss Pill Cuts 13% Body Weight in 3 Months, Outshines Placebo (6:15): Dr. Vulcano's Innovative Surgery Offers Rapid R…
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Edward Dolnick joins to discuss how scientists and the general public viewed dinosaurs in the early 1800s. Plus hadrosaurs living in age-separated groups, two new hadrosauroids: Coahuilasaurus from Mexico and Qianjiangsaurus from China, and the latest installment in the Jurassic Park franchise will be called Jurassic World Rebirth and come out on J…
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