On this week’s show: Factors that pushed snakes to evolve so many different habitats and lifestyles, and news from the AAAS annual meeting
First up on the show this week, news from this year’s annual meeting of AAAS (publisher of Science) in Denver. News intern Sean Cummings talks with Danielle Wood, director of the Space Enabled Research Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, about the sustainable use of orbital space or how space exploration and research can benefit everyone.
And Newsletter Editor Christie Wilcox joins host Sarah Crespi with an extravaganza of meeting stories including a chat with some of the authors of this year’s Newcomb Cleveland Prize–winning Science paper on how horses spread across North America.
Voices in this segment:
William Taylor, assistant professor and curator of archaeology at the University of Colorado Boulder’s Museum of Natural History
Ludovic Orlando, director of the Centre for Anthropobiology and Genomics of Toulouse
University of Oklahoma archaeologists Sarah Trabert and Brandi Bethke
Yvette Running Horse Collin, post-doctoral researcher Paul Sabatier University (Toulouse III)
Next on the show: What makes snakes so special? Freelance producer Ariana Remmel talks with Daniel Rabosky, professor in ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Michigan, about the drivers for all the different ways snakes have specialized—from spitting venom to sensing heat.
This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy.
About the Science Podcast
Authors: Sarah Crespi; Ariana Remmel; Christie Wilcox; Sean Cummings
Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.zabhbwe
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Seeing the Milky Way’s central black hole, and calling dolphins by their names
Fixing fat bubbles for vaccines, and preventing pain from turning chronic
Staking out the start of the Anthropocene, and why sunscreen is bad for coral
Using quantum tools to track dark matter, why rabies remains, and a book series on science and food
Protecting birds from brightly lit buildings, and controlling robots from orbit
Desert ‘skins’ drying up, and one of the oldest Maya calendars
A surprisingly weighty fundamental particle, and surveying the seas for RNA viruses
Probing Earth’s mysterious inner core, and the most complete human genome to date
Scientists become targets on social media, and battling space weather
The challenges of testing medicines during pregnancy, and when not paying attention makes sense
Monitoring wastewater for SARS-CoV-2, and looking back at the biggest questions about the pandemic
A global treaty on plastic pollution, and a dearth of Black physicists
Securing nuclear waste for 100,000 years, and the link between math literacy and life satisfaction
COVID-19’s long-term impact on the heart, and calculating the survival rate of human artifacts
Merging supermassive black holes, and communicating science in the age of social media
Building a green city in a biodiversity hot spot, and live monitoring vehicle emissions
Fecal transplants in pill form, and gut bacteria that nourish hibernating squirrels
A window into live brains, and what saliva tells babies about human relationships
Cloning for conservation, and divining dynamos on super-Earths
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