Science Magazine Podcast

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Science Magazine Podcast

Science Magazine Podcast

Oluşturan: Science Magazine

Weekly podcasts from Science Magazine, the world's leading journal of original scientific research, global news, and commentary.

EN Amerika Birleşik Devletleri Eğitim

Son Bölümler

622 bölüm
Reversing ecological destruction in the Galápagos, and finally mapping Antarctica’s surface

Reversing ecological destruction in the Galápagos, and finally mapping Antarctica’s surface

First up on the podcast, freelance science journalist Sofia Quaglia talks about her visit to the Galápagos archipelago and how researchers there are w...

2026-01-15 22:00:00 1826
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The real da Vinci code, and the world’s oldest poison arrows

The real da Vinci code, and the world’s oldest poison arrows

First up on the podcast, scholars are on a quest to find Leonardo da Vinci’s DNA. With no direct descendants, the hunt involves sampling the famous po...

2026-01-08 22:00:00 1651
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Looking for continents on exoplanets, and math is hard for mathematicians, too

Looking for continents on exoplanets, and math is hard for mathematicians, too

First up on the podcast, the best images of exoplanets right now are basically bright dots. We can’t see possible continents, potential oceans, or eve...

2026-01-01 22:00:00 2609
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This year’s biggest breakthrough and top news stories

This year’s biggest breakthrough and top news stories

First up on the podcast, Online News Editor David Grimm joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about this year’s best online news stories—top performers and...

2025-12-18 22:00:00 2038
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Hunting asteroids from space, and talking to pollinators with heat

Hunting asteroids from space, and talking to pollinators with heat

First up on the podcast, we’ve likely only found about half the so-called city-killer asteroids (objects more than 140 meters in diameter). Freelance...

2025-12-11 22:00:00 1679
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Grappling with declining populations, and the future of quantum mechanics

Grappling with declining populations, and the future of quantum mechanics

First up on the podcast, Science celebrates 100 years of quantum mechanics with a special issue covering the past, present, and future of the field. N...

2025-12-04 22:00:00 2280
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When we’ll hit peak carbon emissions, and macaques that keep the beat

When we’ll hit peak carbon emissions, and macaques that keep the beat

First up on the podcast, when will the world hit peak carbon emissions? It’s not an easy question to answer because emissions cannot be directly measu...

2025-11-27 22:00:00 1581
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A headless mystery, and a deep dive on dog research

A headless mystery, and a deep dive on dog research

First up on the podcast: the mysterious fate of Europe’s Neolithic farmers. They arrived from Anatolia around 5500 B.C.E. and began farming fertile la...

2025-11-20 22:00:00 1955
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Solving the ‘golfer’s curse’ and using space as a heat sink

Solving the ‘golfer’s curse’ and using space as a heat sink

First up on the podcast, Online News Editor David Grimm joins host Sarah Crespi for a rundown of online news stories. They talk about lichen that dine...

2025-11-13 22:00:00 1693
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Understanding early Amazon communities and saving the endangered pocket mouse

Understanding early Amazon communities and saving the endangered pocket mouse

First up on the podcast, Contributing Correspondent Sofia Moutinho visited the Xingu Indigenous territory in Brazil to learn about a long-standing col...

2025-11-06 22:00:00 2103
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Detecting the acidity of the ocean with sound, the role of lead in human evolution, and how the universe ends

Detecting the acidity of the ocean with sound, the role of lead in human evolution, and how the universe ends

First up on the podcast, increased carbon dioxide emissions sink more acidity into the ocean, but checking pH all over the world, up and down the wate...

2025-10-30 21:00:00 2727
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The contagious buzz of bumble bee positivity, and when snow crabs vanish

The contagious buzz of bumble bee positivity, and when snow crabs vanish

First up on the podcast, the Bering Sea’s snow crabs are bouncing back after a 50-billion-crab die-off in 2020, but scientists are racing to predict w...

2025-10-23 21:00:00 1633
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Hunting ancient viruses in the Arctic, and how ants build their nests to fight disease

Hunting ancient viruses in the Arctic, and how ants build their nests to fight disease

First up on the podcast, Contributing Correspondent Kai Kupferschmidt takes a trip to Svalbard, an Arctic archipelago where ancient RNA viruses may li...

2025-10-16 21:00:00 1598
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How birds reacted to a solar eclipse, and keeping wildfire smoke out of wine

How birds reacted to a solar eclipse, and keeping wildfire smoke out of wine

First up on the podcast, producer Kevin McLean talks with Associate Online News Editor Michael Greshko about the impact of wildfires on wine; a couple...

2025-10-09 21:00:00 2220
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A new generation of radiotherapies for cancer, and why we sigh

A new generation of radiotherapies for cancer, and why we sigh

First up on the podcast, Staff Writer Robert F. Service joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about a boom in nuclear medicine, from new and more powerful r...

2025-10-02 21:00:00 2088
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Salty permafrost’s role in Arctic melting, the promise of continuous protein monitoring, and death in the ancient world

Salty permafrost’s role in Arctic melting, the promise of continuous protein monitoring, and death in the ancient world

First up on the podcast, Science News Editor Tim Appenzeller joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss why a salty layer of permafrost undergirding Arctic ic...

2025-09-25 21:00:00 2782
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Protecting newborns from an invisible killer, the rise of drones for farming, and a Druid mystery

Protecting newborns from an invisible killer, the rise of drones for farming, and a Druid mystery

First up on the podcast, freelance science journalist Leslie Roberts joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about the long journey to a vaccine for group B s...

2025-09-18 12:00:00 2100
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An aggressive cancer’s loophole, and a massive field of hydrogen beneath the ocean floor

An aggressive cancer’s loophole, and a massive field of hydrogen beneath the ocean floor

First up on the podcast, aggressive tumors have a secret cache of DNA that may help them beat current drug treatments. Freelance journalist Elie Dolgi...

2025-09-11 12:00:00 2114
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Finding HIV’s last bastion in the body, and playing the violin like a cricket

Finding HIV’s last bastion in the body, and playing the violin like a cricket

First up on the podcast, despite so many advances in treatment, HIV drugs can suppress the virus but can’t cure the infection. Where does suppressed...

2025-09-04 12:00:00 1977
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A mother lode of Mexican mammoths, how water pollution enters the air, and a book on playing dead

A mother lode of Mexican mammoths, how water pollution enters the air, and a book on playing dead

First up on the podcast, Staff Writer Rodrigo Pérez Ortega joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about a megafauna megafind that rivals the La Brea Tar Pits...

2025-08-28 12:00:00 3307
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New insights into endometriosis, and mapping dengue in Latin America

New insights into endometriosis, and mapping dengue in Latin America

First up on the podcast, Staff Writer Meredith Wadman joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss recent advances in understanding endometriosis—a disease wher...

2025-08-21 12:00:00 1927
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Why chatbots lie, and can synthetic organs and AI replace animal testing?

Why chatbots lie, and can synthetic organs and AI replace animal testing?

First up on the podcast, producer Meagan Cantwell and Contributing Correspondent Sara Reardon discuss alternative approaches to animal testing, from a...

2025-08-14 12:00:00 1913
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Why anteaters keep evolving, and how giant whales get enough food to live

Why anteaters keep evolving, and how giant whales get enough food to live

First up on the podcast, Online News Editor David Grimm brings stories on peacock feathers’ ability to emit laser light, how anteaters have evolved at...

2025-08-07 12:00:00 1688
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Wartime science in Ukraine, what Neanderthals really ate, and visiting the city of the dead

Wartime science in Ukraine, what Neanderthals really ate, and visiting the city of the dead

First up on the podcast, Contributing Correspondent Richard Stone joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about the toll of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine an...

2025-07-31 12:00:00 3093
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Robots that eat other robots, and an ancient hot spot of early human relatives

Robots that eat other robots, and an ancient hot spot of early human relatives

First up on the podcast, South Africa’s Cradle of Humankind is home to the world’s greatest concentration of ancestral human remains, including our ow...

2025-07-24 12:00:00 2085
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Studying a shark-haunted island, and upgrading our microbiomes with engineered bacteria

Studying a shark-haunted island, and upgrading our microbiomes with engineered bacteria

First up on the podcast, Réunion Island had a shark attack crisis in
2011 and closed its beaches for more than a decade. Former News Intern Alex...

2025-07-17 12:00:00 2210
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A tardi party for the ScienceAdviser newsletter, and sled dog genomes

A tardi party for the ScienceAdviser newsletter, and sled dog genomes

First up on the podcast, Newsletter Editor Christie Wilcox joins host Sarah Crespi to celebrate the 2-year anniversary of ScienceAdviser with many sto...

2025-07-10 12:00:00 1552
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Losing years of progress against HIV, and farming plastic on Mars

Losing years of progress against HIV, and farming plastic on Mars

First up on the podcast, U.S. aid helped two African countries rein in HIV. Then came President Donald Trump. Senior News Correspondent Jon Cohen talk...

2025-07-03 12:00:00 1872
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Will your family turn you into a chatbot after you die? Plus, synthetic squid skin, and the sway of matriarchs in ancient Anatolia

Will your family turn you into a chatbot after you die? Plus, synthetic squid skin, and the sway of matriarchs in ancient Anatolia

First up on the podcast, Contributing Correspondent Andrew Curry joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss a pair of Science papers on kinship and culture in...

2025-06-26 12:00:00 2697
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How effective are plastic bag bans? And a whole new way to do astronomy

How effective are plastic bag bans? And a whole new way to do astronomy

First up on the podcast, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory is just coming online, and once fully operational, it will take a snapshot of the entire southe...

2025-06-19 12:00:00 2245
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Why peanut allergy is so common and hot forests as test beds for climate change

Why peanut allergy is so common and hot forests as test beds for climate change

First up on the podcast, Staff Writer Erik Stokstad talks with host Sarah Crespi about how scientists are probing the world’s hottest forests to bette...

2025-06-12 12:00:00 2242
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Farming maize in ice age Michigan, predicting the future climate of cities, and our host takes a quiz on the sounds of science

Farming maize in ice age Michigan, predicting the future climate of cities, and our host takes a quiz on the sounds of science

First up on the podcast, we hear from Staff Writer Paul Voosen about the tricky problem of regional climate prediction. Although global climate change...

2025-06-05 12:00:00 2525
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Tickling in review, spores in the stratosphere, and longevity research

Tickling in review, spores in the stratosphere, and longevity research

First up on the podcast, Online News Editor Michael Greshko joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about stories set high above our heads. They discuss captu...

2025-05-29 12:00:00 3150
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Strange metals and our own personal ‘oxidation fields’

Strange metals and our own personal ‘oxidation fields’

First up on the podcast, freelance journalist Zack Savitsky joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about the strange metal state. Physicists are probing the<...

2025-05-22 12:00:00 2413
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A horse science roundup and using dubious brain scans as evidence of crimes

A horse science roundup and using dubious brain scans as evidence of crimes

First up on the podcast, freelance journalist Jonathan Moens talks with host Sarah Crespi about a forensic test called brain electrical oscillation si...

2025-05-15 12:00:00 1827
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Analyzing music from ancient Greece and Rome, and the 100 days that shook science

Analyzing music from ancient Greece and Rome, and the 100 days that shook science

First up on the podcast, producer Meagan Cantwell worked with the Science News team to review how the first 100 days of President
Donald Trump’s...

2025-05-08 12:00:00 1997
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Tales from an Italian crypt, and the science behind ‘dad bods’

Tales from an Italian crypt, and the science behind ‘dad bods’

First up on the podcast, Contributing Correspondent Andrew Curry talks with host Sarah Crespi about his visit to 17th century crypts under an old hosp...

2025-05-01 12:00:00 1948
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A caterpillar that haunts spiderwebs, solving the last riddles of a famed friar, and a new book series

A caterpillar that haunts spiderwebs, solving the last riddles of a famed friar, and a new book series

First up on the podcast, bringing Gregor Mendel’s peas into the 21st century. Back in the 19th century Mendel, a friar and naturalist, tracked traits...

2025-04-24 12:00:00 2752
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Linking cat domestication to ancient cult sacrifices, and watching aurorae wander

Linking cat domestication to ancient cult sacrifices, and watching aurorae wander

First up on the podcast, Online News Editor David Grimm joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about how an Egyptian cult that killed cats may have also tame...

2025-04-17 12:00:00 1596
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The metabolic consequences of skipping sleep, and cuts and layoffs slam NIH

The metabolic consequences of skipping sleep, and cuts and layoffs slam NIH

First up on the podcast, ScienceInsider Editor Jocelyn Kaiser joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss big changes in science funding and government jobs th...

2025-04-10 12:00:00 1714
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