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IFLScience - Break It Down

IFLScience - Break It Down

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Your bite-size guide to this week in science. Join hosts Eleanor Higgs and Rachael Funnell as they discuss the biggest news stories of the week with guests from the IFLScience team and maybe even a surprise expert or two. So, let’s Break It Down…Copyright 2024 All rights reserved. Ciencia Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Moa De-Extinction, Fashionable Chimps, And Robot Surgery – No Human Required
    Jul 11 2025

    This week on Break It Down: just a week after the discovery of our third-ever interstellar visitor we may know where it came from, ancient enamel provides a snapshot into the lives of prehistoric rhinos, the moa becomes the fifth species targeted for de-extinction, a robot performs gallbladder surgery – no human required, chimps start a new fashion trend with grass in their ears (and rears), and 100 years since The Scopes (Monkey) Trial, how much has changed?

    So, sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…

    Links:

    Interstellar visitor

    Prof Chris Lintott interview

    Ancient enamel

    Moa de-extinction

    Moa foot

    Robot surgery

    Fashionable chimps

    The Scopes (Monkey) Trial

    The Big Questions

    We Have Questions

    Human origins

    Malayan tigers

    Más Menos
    43 m
  • Interstellar Object, Cheesy Nightmares, And Smooching Orcas
    Jul 4 2025

    This week on Break It Down: We’ve just seen our third-ever interstellar object whizzing though the Solar System, eating cheese really might give you nightmares (but so might dessert), cavers are rewarded with a treasure trove of blind, mummified invertebrates including the only known cave-adapted wasp, the Neanderthal fat factory is just a delicious as it sounds, orcas caught kissing out in the wild, and if the Moon gets slapped by an asteroid as NASA predicts there’s a 4.1 percent chance it might, it would be a 1-in-5,000-years spectacle for Earth to enjoy (from a safe distance).

    So, sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…

    Links:

    Interstellar object

    Cheesy nightmares

    Cave of mummified insects

    Neanderthal fat factory

    Collagen

    Smooching orcas

    Orcas Giving Humans Food

    Asteroid about to slap the Moon

    Project Hail Memory

    We Have Questions

    CURIOUS magazine

    The Big Questions

    Más Menos
    35 m
  • Wellness Whales, A New Blood Type, And A DJ Set From Space
    Jun 27 2025

    This week on Break It Down: feast your eyes on the stunning first images from the world’s largest digital camera, capturing millions of galaxies and thousands of new asteroids. Why killer whales are rubbing each other luxuriously with seaweed, the world’s oldest rocks aren’t that much younger than the planet, mice born from two dads prove they’re fertile, a French woman becomes the only known person in the world with a new kind of blood type, and we celebrate 50 years of the European Space Agency with a special interview with astronaut Luca Parmitano.

    So, sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…

    Links:

    World’s largest digital camera

    Vera C Rubin images of space

    Be the first to spot a galaxy

    Orcas allokelping

    World’s oldest rocks

    Mice with two dads

    Brand new blood type

    Can we make blood?

    50 years of ESA

    Brain uploads

    Bonus episode of We Have Questions

    Dolphins help a lost whale

    Más Menos
    34 m
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