The Science Show

ABC Australia
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Jul 1, 2025 • 14min

Lab Notes: What we can learn from the world’s cleanest air

We often hear about places where the air quality is bad, even dangerous, but what about where the air is the cleanest on Earth?That air can be found blowing onto the north-west tip of Tasmania at Kennaook/Cape Grim, where an air pollution station has quietly been keeping track of how humans have changed the makeup of our atmosphere for 50 years.So what does the world's cleanest air tell us?
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Jun 28, 2025 • 54min

A portrait of philosopher Karl Popper

Karl Popper (1902-1994) is regarded as one of the greatest philosophers of science of the twentieth century. Alan Saunders presented this portrait of Karl Popper for The Science Show in January 2001.
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Jun 24, 2025 • 12min

Lab Notes: How Ozempic stops food cravings

Lotus Jeffs, a PhD student from Monash University, discusses the intriguing effects of Ozempic on appetite suppression. She explains how GLP-1 agonists, inspired by lizard venom, work in the brain to reduce cravings for unhealthy foods. The conversation dives into the physiological and psychological changes these drugs induce, alongside challenges in drug approvals due to potential health risks. Jeffs also highlights the surprising mental health implications, including concerns about depression and their potential for new therapeutic uses.
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Jun 21, 2025 • 54min

Celebrating Charles Todd and the overland telegraph

The overland telegraph connecting Australia to the world was completed just over 150 years ago. It was built due to the dedication of a public servant, Charles Todd.
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Jun 17, 2025 • 15min

Lab Notes: The tiny beetle ravaging Perth's trees

It's the size of a sesame seed, but it could cause unfathomable destruction to Australia's forests and urban canopy.A beetle called the polyphagous shot-hole borer (Euwallacea fornicatus) is silently spreading through Perth and its surrounds, forcing councils to chop and chip hundreds of trees — even century-old Moreton Bay figs.So how does the tiny pest cause such massive problems?
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Jun 14, 2025 • 54min

Professor Roger Short, reproductive biologist

Roger Short (1930-2021) discusses influences in his early life, and some of his research achievements including melatonin as a controller of circadian rhythms, and aspects of reproductive biology across the animal world.
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Jun 10, 2025 • 15min

Lab Notes: What makes Sydney's cockies so clever?

First they learnt how to flip open wheelie bin lids. Now they're using water fountains.Masters of the urban landscape, sulphur-crested cockatoos (Cacatua galerita) are more than capable of some quirky (and sometimes messy) antics.So what do these entertaining exploits tell us about cockie innovation — or even cockie culture?
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Jun 7, 2025 • 54min

Hang on – we’re about to enter a wormhole!

Get ready for gravitons, dark photons and transition states. Kathryn Zurek takes us on a tour of the bewildering world of quantum physics.
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Jun 3, 2025 • 14min

Lab Notes: How microscopic algae can devastate ocean life

A couple of months ago, a killer started mobilising off the South Australian shore — one that would wipe out marine life, make surfers feel sick, and smother picturesque beaches in thick foam.The culprit? A bloom of tiny organisms called microalgae. We can't see them with the naked eye, but in big enough numbers, they can devastate ecosystems.So what made the South Australian algal bloom so lethal, and can anything be done about blooms like it?
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May 31, 2025 • 55min

Black white and green

People have been in the Australian wilderness for generations. But can people be considered part of the natural landscape or will they always have an impact?

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