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CrowdScience

Could we survive an extinction event?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 24 January 2020

⏱️ 39 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Super-sized volcanic eruptions and giant asteroids crashing in from outer space are the stuff of disaster movies. They have listener Santosh from South Africa slightly concerned. He’d like to know what’s being done in real life to prepare for this kind of event. Although the chance of these events occurring is low, Santosh isn’t entirely wrong to be worried: Earth has a much longer history than humans do, and there’s evidence that several past extinction events millions of years ago wiped out the dominant species on the planet at the time, as we’ve heard before on CrowdScience. The kind of extraordinary geological and extra-terrestrial hazards thought to be responsible for the death of millions of lives do still exist. So is there really any way that humans could survive where the dinosaurs – and plenty of other species – have failed? Presenter Marnie Chesterton finds out by meeting experts who are already preparing for the remote but real possibility of the biggest disaster we could face. It turns out that in real life most things we can think of which could cause an extinction event are being watched closely by scientists and governmental agencies. How worried we should really be by the possibility of a sudden super-volcanic eruption at Yellowstone in the USA, or one of the other enormous volcanoes dotting our planet’s surface? Marnie heads into an underground bunker near the remote Scottish coast to find out if hiding out is a viable survival option. Now a museum, Scotland’s Secret Bunker, formerly RAF Troywood, is one of a network of nuclear shelters built by nation states during the Cold War. And she hears about one of the combined space agencies most ambitious projects yet: NASA and ESA’s Asteroid Impact and Deflection Assessment mission to crash an impactor into an asteroid’s moon to find out whether we could knock any potentially problematic collisions off-course well before Earth impact.

Produced by Jennifer Whyntie for BBC World Service

(Photo: Post apocalypse sole survivor. Credit: Getty Images)

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're about to listen to a BBC podcast and maybe it's when I had a hand in.

0:04.0

I'm Tammy Walker and I produce podcasts for the BBC.

0:08.0

My role is to give new and diverse creators a voice with the opportunity to build a career.

0:12.0

That's the thing I love about podcasts.

0:14.4

You start with just a good idea, but then you have the space to see where it goes.

0:18.4

And doing that at the BBC means we can really run with the best stories

0:21.9

while developing the most unique audio talent.

0:24.3

So if you like what you hear, why not check out the huge range of podcast we've got on BBC

0:29.1

Sounds. Okay. Wow. This feels like something out of a movie.

0:57.0

This gets used for a lot of movies.

1:00.0

Does it?

1:01.0

Yeah.

1:02.0

A lot of movies have been made in here over the years.

1:05.0

Because of the nature of the building,

1:07.0

it's great for me for any what kind of war for them or zombie apocalypse.

1:19.0

The epic music is appropriate because this is a secret bunker, 30 meters underneath an entrance near the Scottish coast.

1:23.5

In the event of apocalyptic devastation, we could govern the country from here.

1:28.6

In this command room, in semi-darkness, desks for ministers, scientists and civil servants surround huge illuminated

1:35.9

glass maps which are lit up to show outlines of Scotland and the UK, covered in glowing dots

1:42.2

where military bases, towns and cities hopefully still exist.

1:46.5

I'm Marnie Chesterton and on today's crowd science from the BBC World Service, we're in full

1:51.9

survival mode because of a question from listener Santosh.

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