Ancient Algae, COVID Holidays, Accessible Pregnancy Test. Nov 6, 2020, Part 2
Science Friday
Science Friday and WNYC Studios
4.4 • 6.3K Ratings
🗓️ 6 November 2020
⏱️ 47 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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| 0:00.0 | This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato. |
| 0:03.0 | Later in the hour, if you've decided to gather for holidays this year, |
| 0:07.1 | how to maximize the safety of pandemic travel, |
| 0:10.2 | and when to actually cancel your plans. |
| 0:12.7 | But first, 66 million years ago, |
| 0:16.7 | when an asteroid slammed into what is now the Yucatan Peninsula, |
| 0:20.5 | it set off a period of near global darkness for almost two years. |
| 0:25.6 | Scientists predict the majority of land species went extinct, |
| 0:29.6 | but what was going on in the Earth's oceans, |
| 0:32.2 | and how were these ecosystems able to bounce back from it? |
| 0:36.7 | What may have saved the Earth's oceans may have been a rare type of algae. |
| 0:42.3 | My guest to tell the tale is Dr. Andrew Ridgwell, Professor of Earth System Science at the University of California, Riverside. |
| 0:49.3 | Dr. Ridgwell, welcome to Science Friday. |
| 0:51.3 | Thank you. |
| 0:52.3 | So your models help us understand what ocean environments were like right after that asteroid impact. |
| 0:59.0 | What did the post-impact ocean look like? |
| 1:02.6 | Well, we don't have direct evidence. |
| 1:05.6 | So scientists like to do a lot of speculation, but based on what evidence they do have, |
| 1:11.3 | we're pretty sure that there would have been a period of darkness from all the soot |
| 1:16.3 | and aerosols thrown up by the impact. And so we wondered what the little algae in the ocean were |
| 1:23.1 | doing in a long period of darkness, which maybe was a few years. We don't actually know how long. |
| 1:29.3 | Because that would be rare. |
... |
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