Freak weather getting even freakier
Unexpected Elements
BBC
4.4 • 568 Ratings
🗓️ 8 December 2020
⏱️ 67 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
This year’s Atlantic hurricane season has seen a new record for severe storms says Climatologist Michael Mann. He says warming oceans are one of the drivers.
And Australia has seen spring temperatures hit new highs. Climate scientist Sarah Perkins – Kirkpatrick says it’s all the more remarkable as weather patterns are currently in a cycle associated with cooler temperatures.
Where exactly did SARS- COV-2 emerge from? That’s one of the questions for a WHO fact-finding mission to China looking into the origins of the Virus. Peter Daszak has worked with Chinese scientists for many years, looking for bat viruses with the potential to jump to humans. He tells us how the mission hopes to map out the event which led to the initial spread of the virus.
And the Japanese Hayabusa2 space probe is due to return to earth. Masaki Fujimoto Deputy director of the Japanese Space Agency JAXA, tell us what to expect when a cargo of material from a distant asteroid lands in the Australian desert.
From dumping raw sewage into rivers to littering the streets with our trash, humans don’t have a great track record when it comes to dealing with our waste. It’s something that CrowdScience listener and civil engineer Marc has noticed: he wonders if humans are particularly prone to messing up our surroundings, while other species are instinctively more hygienic and well-organised.
Aasre we, by nature, really less clean and tidy than other animals? Farming and technology have allowed us to live more densely and generate more rubbish - maybe our cleaning instincts just aren’t up to the vast quantities of waste we spew out? CrowdScience digs into the past to see if early human rubbish heaps can turn up any answers. We follow a sewer down to the River Thames to hear about The Great Stink of Victorian London; turn to ants for housekeeping inspiration; and find out how to raise hygiene standards by tapping into our feelings of disgust and our desire to follow rules.
(Image: Getty Images)
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Oh, hello. You have chosen a BBC podcast, but before you listen to it, we thought you might |
| 0:04.7 | like our podcast too. You might. You might. It is called Sightracked with me, Nick Grimshaw. |
| 0:09.2 | And me, Annie Mack. And we talk about the week in music. All the news, all the cultural |
| 0:14.0 | happenings in the UK and beyond. And great guests. And it's on BBC Sounds. Yes, where you can |
| 0:19.7 | also enjoy lots of playlists, music mixes and |
| 0:22.6 | live radio, everything from my six music breakfast show to Radio 3 Unwind. But obviously start |
| 0:29.2 | with our podcast, sidetrack. Obviously. Obviously. So if you like music, listen on BBC |
| 0:33.7 | Sounds. This is The Science Hour from the BBC World Service with me, Roland Pease. |
| 0:38.8 | And for those of you who say this podcast is full of this edition, you're actually right. I mean, |
| 0:46.5 | crowd science are the team that goes where no one dares. So this place probably became a load stinkier. |
| 0:55.7 | Apparently the banks, just where we're standing, used to glisten. |
| 1:00.7 | And they glisten with the sludge of human sewage. |
| 1:06.6 | There was also some people that made a living skimming off from the surface of the river with a sieve fat, |
| 1:14.4 | which they were packing in casks and selling it to the local factories. |
| 1:18.4 | It was called Thames mud butter and that was used for lubrication in the machinery, |
| 1:22.1 | but it's in fact just fat from untreated human waste. |
| 1:27.1 | The secrets of excreter and all kinds of rubbish. |
| 1:29.9 | Coming up later in the hour. |
| 1:31.4 | Before that, on science and action, |
| 1:33.4 | it's the waste we put up in the atmosphere that's under discussion, |
| 1:36.4 | the gas that drove the record Atlantic hurricane season that's just finished. |
| 1:43.0 | This area of cloud may look fairly innocuous on the satellite picture, out in the open |
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