As lava consumes homes on the Reykjavik Peninsula in Iceland, evacuated communities have been witnessing eruptions shifting and intensifying. We take a look at the latest science that’s helping teams on the ground accurately predict where the danger is coming from, helping people to stay safe. Our go-to volcanologist, Dr Evgenia Ilyinskaya, and her colleague, Professor Andrew Hooper, from the University of Leeds tell presenter Victoria about these new technological advancements, and ask the crucial question: are we entering a new millennium of volcanic activity in Iceland?
When looking at clear ocean water, you might assume that, aside from fish and some algae, there isn’t much living in it. But Prof Carlos Duarte knows it is full of life. In fact, his new study shows just how many different microbes – bacteria, viruses & fungi – live in all parts of our ocean. He and his team at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia have created the largest ocean genome catalogue to date. Prof Mark Blaxter from the Wellcome Sanger Institute joins us to discuss this new study, the benefits of hypothesis-free science, and why he believes cataloguing the code of life of all the species on earth is an important endeavour.
And, lastly, an old dinosaur fossil in New Mexico has been re-examined. What was believed to be of the infamous Tyrannosaurus rex may have been a different species all along. But not all palaeontologists agree. How do scientists even tell a dinosaur species from a fossil? Prof Stephen Brusatte tells Vic that it’s all about comparing bones.
Presenter: Victoria Gill Producers: Florian Bohr, Louise Orchard, Hannah Robbins Editor: Martin Smith Production Co-ordinator: Jana Bennett-Holesworth
BBC Inside Science is produced in collaboration with the Open University.
Running Rings Around Matter
Precious Metals, Earlier Eggs, and Meaningful Meteorites
The Ebb and Flow of the Tidal Power Revolution
Building Better Engagement
A Trip-Switch for Depression?
Declining Data, Climate Deadlines and the Day the Dinosaurs Died
How can the UK get to zero carbon?
Racial inequality in UK science
Global food security during Ukraine conflict
High Seas treaty talks and discoveries from the deep
Cyber frontlines in Ukraine
Inside Science is now first on BBC Sounds
World’s largest Jurassic pterosaur found on Skye
COVID-19: Beginnings... and endings?
Fusion energy smashes world record
The Continuing Story of the Nuclear Waste Bill
Predicting Long Covid, and the Global Toll of Antimicrobial Resistance
The 'perfect' depth for a destructive eruption
The Rutland ‘Sea Dragon’, An Astronomer's Christmas and some Animal Magic
Deep ocean exploration
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