• Nature Podcast

    27 November 2008

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    • In this episode:

      • 00:00

        play

        Water on Enceladus

        Scientists figure out the source of water vapour jets on Saturn's sixth moon.

      • 07.52

        play

        Eating the Sun

        A new book by Oliver Morton reminds us how photosynthesis powers our planet.

      • 12.54

        play

        Big plants

        We find out why hybrid offspring often grow bigger than their parent plants.

      • 18.20

        play

        Turtles in a half shell

        The oldest turtle fossil ever found sparks controversy in the field of turtle evolution.

      • 23.25

        play

        Neuro jamboree

        Kerri brings us the highlights from this year's Society for Neuroscience meeting in Washington DC.

      • 28.39

        play

        Newschat

        Electric cars, a new synchrotron in Japan, and how scientists are monitoring endangered porpoises in the Gulf of California.

About the Nature Podcast

Each week Nature publishes a free audio show. It's hosted by Adam Rutherford and Kerri Smith and features reporters Charlotte Stoddart, Geoff Brumfiel and Natasha Gilbert. Every show features highlighted content from the week's edition of Nature including interviews with the people behind the science, and in-depth commentary and analysis from journalists covering science around the world.

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For complete access to the original papers featured in the Nature Podcast, subscribe to Nature.

Extra navigation

  • Archive

    • Podcast Extra - Pavan Sukhdev:

      We measure our economies in terms of trade, production and services - but one vital component is missing: the environment. Pavan Sukhdev is the study leader for a UN-run program on the economics of ecosystems and biodiversity, and he wants to see these resources accounted for. Kerri Smith talks to him.

    • 12 November 2009:

      How a language gene behaves in humans and chimps, determining orbiting planets from a star's lithium levels, the run up to the UN climate change conference in Copenhagen, and a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

    • 05 November 2009:

      Scientists take a closer look at a star first spotted in 1680, how unrelated animals lend a helping hand, a 'Pleistocene Park' in the Netherlands, and a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

    • See complete archive >>