Can we forecast earthquakes?, Britain's space race rocket Skylark, Francis Galton
BBC Inside Science
BBC
4.6 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 16 November 2017
⏱️ 36 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
What might the length of the day have to do with the likelihood of destructive earthquakes around the world? According to Professors Rebecca Bendick and Roger Bilham, there's a correlation between changes in the rate at which the Earth rotates and the incidence of earthquakes of Magnitude 7 and above. The rotation speed of the planet increases and decreases over periods of years and decades. From their research, the earth scientists say that there's an substantial increase in the number of powerful earthquakes around the world five years after the Earth attains a peak in its spin speed and enters a period of slow down. The difference in day length is tiny but it is enough, say the researchers, to trigger already stressed faults in the crust to move sooner than later.
In the year that the Soviet Union launched Sputnik into orbit, the UK launched its own rocket into the Space Race. 1957 saw the launch of the first Skylark space rocket. Inside Science talks to two veterans of the Skylark programme - Professors John Zarnecki and Ken Pounds - who cut their space research teeth with some of the 440 launches. The Science Museum in London is staging a Skylark exhibition in celebration.
Francis Galton was one of the UK's most influential 19th century scientists and laid important methodological foundations for genetics and other fields of science today. But he was also a racist and leading proponent of eugenics. Adam discusses Galton's legacy with historian Subhadra Das of University College London and clinical geneticist Han Brunner of the Maastricht University Medical Centre in the Netherlands. Both guests attended a meeting of the Galton Institute in London which brought together researchers of many disciplines to discuss the bad and the good in Francis Galton's legacy.
Producer: Andrew Luck-Baker.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello you this is the podcast of Insight Science from BBC Radio 4 first broadcast on the 16th of |
| 0:06.1 | November 2017 I'm Adam Rutherford it's the 60th anniversary of a British engineering |
| 0:11.8 | tour de force a rocket launched over 400 times. |
| 0:15.9 | Most people have never heard of it. |
| 0:17.6 | And we're reassessing the scientific legacy of someone who has had |
| 0:20.8 | incomparable influence but is similarly not that well known. |
| 0:25.0 | Francis Golden is the most important Victorian scientist most people have never heard of. |
| 0:29.0 | And this is one old dead white man that I think we really need to write back into the history books |
| 0:34.8 | because of the nature of the work that he did and his influence and also the way that we talk about |
| 0:40.0 | it is something that we need to improve in our society. |
| 0:43.0 | Francis Galton, brilliant scientist, hideous racist, that's all coming up later. |
| 0:48.0 | But we start with earthquakes. |
| 0:50.0 | The week began with the grim news of a powerful quake magnitude 7.3 in the Middle East, |
| 0:56.1 | killing more than 500 people in Iran and Iraq. |
| 0:59.3 | Earthquakes aren't uncommon in this region. |
| 1:01.7 | It's where two of the Earth's tectonic plates are in slow motion |
| 1:04.8 | collision. The crust is under stress and every so often it fails somewhere with a cataclysmic |
| 1:11.2 | energy release. This week's is the sixth major quake this year in the most deadly category, |
| 1:17.0 | magnitude 7 and above. |
| 1:19.0 | The number of events of this size does vary from year to year, |
| 1:22.0 | but according to a new idea from two |
| 1:24.0 | seismologists in the US this fluctuation is not random and understanding this |
... |
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