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BBC Inside Science

Climate change belief; Anthropocene era; Eyes on the sea; Origins of multicellular life

BBC Inside Science

BBC

Technology, Science

4.51.3K Ratings

🗓️ 29 January 2015

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We all remember the floods across much of central and southern England this time last year, and the devastating effect they had on people's lives and livelihoods. Today, a group of researchers at Cardiff University published a report on how people's perception of climate change has evolved in the wake of the floods. To what extent has our belief in man-made climate change altered? Do we now regard last year's events as a sign of things to come? Adam Rutherford talks to Nick Pidgeon from Cardiff University's School of Psychology who led this UK wide study

Earlier this week an international group of climate scientists, geographers and ecologists met at the Stockholm Resilience Centre in Sweden to wrangle how we can practically make the best of the Anthropocene - the new geological epoch that many consider that we now find ourselves in. Gaia Vince author of Adventures in the Anthropocene, reports from the Stockholm meeting

At the UK's Satellite Application Catapult in Harwell, a project has been unveiled that seeks to offer real time data on the world's fishing fleet to help governments police illegal fishing. Pulling together data from shipping registers, satellite images, radar and ships' own transponders, Eyes on the Sea automatically scans for suspicious activity and can alert human users and allow them to see what ships are up to. The Pew Charitable Trusts hope that vessels carrying illegal cargoes can then be tracked across the ocean, and any port receiving them would know where they had been and what they had been up to.

How complex cells evolved is a mystery. Current theories on the evolutionary jump, between 1 and 2 billion years ago, from life forms based on a simple prokaryote cell to the complex multiple eukaryote cells with a cell nucleus and a host of complex internal machinery, fails to explain much of what we see within animal, plant and fungi cells today. Adam talks to Buzz Baum a cell biologist at University College London who has devised a new testable model which appears to explain one of biology's most basic questions.

Producer: Adrian Washbourne.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Choosing what to watch night after night the flicking through the endless

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searching is a nightmare we want to help you on our brand new podcast off the

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Load to games, loads of fun, loads of screaming.

0:19.0

Lovely. Off the telly with me Joanna Paige.

0:21.0

And me, Natalie Cassidy, so your evenings can be a little less

0:24.9

searching and a lot more watching listen on BBC sounds.

0:29.2

Hello you this is the podcast of BBC Inside Science first broadcast on the 29th of January

0:35.1

2015 I'm Adam Rutherford. Gjaw and the normal flapdoodle can be found at BBC.co.

0:41.1

UK slash radio4. Some weeks it's all about the BBC.

0:43.6

Co. dot UK slash Radio 4.

0:44.0

Some weeks it's all about the physics.

0:45.4

Today humans abound.

0:47.3

Where we come from, where we're going.

0:49.2

We delve into the Anthropocene, the geological epoch that we're in right now, the one uniquely defined

0:55.6

by our own actions.

0:57.6

We take a look at our pillaging of the seas.

1:00.2

One in five fish we eat is caught illegally, and what we're doing to police this.

1:05.2

And we scrutinise a new theory that attempts to explain the origin of our cells,

1:09.7

as well as plants, mushrooms, and everything else on earth that is not a bacteria or their

1:15.0

cousins the mysterious Arcaia. But first, this time last year the headlines were

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