Quentin Cooper hears about the first skilled toolmakers, a battery that won’t set your laptop ablaze, cloning wildcats and, despite Apollo 18, why we should go back to the Moon.

Wissenschaft & Technik
Material World Folgen
Weekly science conversation, on everything from archaeology to zoology, from abacus to the antipodean rodent zyzomys, by way of meteorites. Presented by Quentin Cooper, and airing every Thursday, 4:30 pm.
Folgen von Material World
149 Folgen
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Folge vom 01.09.2011Hand axes, New lithium batteries, Cloning wildcats, The moon
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Folge vom 25.08.2011Oldest fossils, Tracking cholera, Playing with uncertainty and Counting species.Oldest fossils, tracking cholera, playing with uncertainty and counting species. Quentin looks at the oldest fossils; tracks cholera across continents, plays games with weather forecasts and asks how many species there really are on Earth. This week, Quentin Cooper looks at what may be the oldest fossils on Earth; he tracks cholera across continents, plays games with weather forecasts to understand uncertainty and asks how many species there really are on Earth. Producer: Martin Redfern
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Folge vom 18.08.2011Jaws, Plesiosaurs, Time perception, Surgery, BeesQuentin Cooper looks at tactile surgery, brainy bees, the evolution of jaws, viviparous sea monsters and our split-second perception of time
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Folge vom 11.08.2011Material: Mob psychology, multiple sclerosis, chimp communication and shrunken heads.This week Quentin Cooper investigates the psychology that turns a peaceful protest into a rioting mob. He hears about a major international study that is tracking down the genetic background to multiple sclerosis. As a new documentary is released about Project Nim, he revisits the classic experiment to bring a chimpanzee up like a human child. And he learns how Amazon tribes shrank human heads.