How the Black Death got its start
Nature Podcast
podcast@nature.com
4.5 • 893 Ratings
🗓️ 15 June 2022
⏱️ 34 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
00:46 Uncovering the origins of the Black Death
The Black Death is estimated to have caused the deaths of up to 60% of the population of Europe. However, despite extensive research, the origin of this wave of disease has remained unclear. Now, by using a combination of techniques, a team have identified a potential starting point in modern day Kyrgyzstan.
Research article: Spyrou et al.
06:57 Research Highlights
The cocktails of toxins produced by wriggling ribbon worms, and a tiny thermometer the size of a grain of sand.
Research Highlight: A poisonous shield, a potent venom: these worms mean business
Research Highlight: Mighty mini-thermometer detects tiny temperature changes
09:22 Researchers race to understand monkeypox
Around the world, there have been a number of outbreaks of monkeypox, a viral disease that has rarely been seen in countries outside of sub-Saharan Africa. Although infection numbers are small, researchers are racing to find out what’s driving these outbreaks and the best way to contain them. We get an update on the situation, and the questions scientists are trying to answer.
Nature News: Monkeypox vaccination begins — can the global outbreaks be contained?
19:20 Briefing Chat
We discuss some highlights from the Nature Briefing. This time, doubts over claims that a Google chat bot has become sentient, and the automated cloud labs that let researchers perform experiments remotely.
New Scientist: Has Google's LaMDA artificial intelligence really achieved sentience?
The Washington Post: The Google engineer who thinks the company’s AI has come to life
Nature News: Cloud labs: where robots do the research
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Transcript
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