4.8 • 4.1K Ratings
🗓️ 13 June 2025
⏱️ 30 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
How big can animals really get before they collapse under their own weight or run out of snacks? Could a 12-foot comedian survive their first punchline without snapping in half? Listener Andrew sends Hannah and Dara on a deep dive into the science of supersized species.
With evolutionary biologists Ben Garrod and Tori Herridge as their guides, they explore the quirky rules of scaling: why giant bones need air pockets, how pressure stockings aren’t just stylish but essential, and why massive creatures have to choose between inefficient chewing or letting dinner ferment in their cavernous stomachs.
Discover why scaling up a mouse would turn it into a blood-boiling disaster and learn the curious logic behind whether the meat bear should eat the two meat dogs, or vice versa (it’s a maths thing…you’ll have to listen). Oh, and here’s the weird constant: whether you’re a mouse or an elephant, everyone takes roughly the same time to pee!
Join Hannah and Dara for a colossal romp through the wild world of ancient giants and the gross super blobs of the (possible) future.
Contributors:
Tori Herridge - Senior Lecturer in evolutionary biology at the University of Sheffield Ben Garrod - Professor of Evolutionary Biology and Science Engagement at the University of East Anglia Martin Sander - Professor of Palaeontology at the University of Bonn
Producer: Ilan Goodman Executive Producer: Alexandra Feachem A BBC Studios Audio Production
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0:00.0 | Before this BBC podcast kicks off, I'd like to tell you about some others you might enjoy. |
0:05.1 | My name's Will Wilkin and I Commission Music Podcast for the BBC. |
0:08.7 | It's a really cool job, but every day we get to tell the incredible stories behind songs, |
0:13.5 | moments and movements, stories of struggle and success, rises and falls, the funny, the ridiculous. |
0:19.1 | And the BBC's position, at the heart of British music |
0:21.7 | means we can tell those stories like no one else. |
0:24.5 | We were, are and always will be right there at the centre of the narrative. |
0:28.6 | So whether you want an insightful take on music right now |
0:31.3 | or a nostalgic deep dive into some of the most famous and infamous moments in music, |
0:36.1 | check out the music podcasts on BBC Sounds. |
0:40.2 | BBC Sounds, music radio podcasts. |
0:46.3 | I'm Hannah Frye, and I'm Dara O'Brien. |
0:48.7 | And this is Curious Cases. |
0:50.5 | The show will we take your quirkiest questions, your crudious conundrums. And then we solve them. |
0:54.9 | With the power of science. I mean, do we always solve them? I mean, the hit rate's pretty low. |
0:59.4 | But it is with science. It is with science. I think you're like today's curious cases, Dara. |
1:09.2 | It's all about size, all about being tall and large. |
1:13.1 | And as an unusually tall comedian. |
1:16.2 | Right. |
1:16.5 | Am I unusually tall? |
1:17.5 | Like I'm tall, 6'4, right? |
1:18.8 | But I suppose I'm not in, I feel like I'm not on the unusually tall. |
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