Sunday Extra - Separate stories podcast
Society & Culture
Tamsin Mather has been studying volcanoes for over 20 years, her work as a professor of Earth sciences at the University of Oxford has taken her across the globe chasing eruptions and monitoring gas plumes to study their impacts on the earth’s atmosphere. Her new book Adventures in Volcanoland: What Volcanoes Tell Us About the World and Ourselves takes us along with her, exploring humanity's complex relationship with these fiery giants through history, art and science. The book charts a course from the rock beneath our feet to the atmosphere above us and even beyond to extraterrestrial volcanoes on distant exoplanets.
Australian baseball’s dark past
Project 2025 and the influence of partisan policy networks
What do Lebanese people think of Hezbollah?
Inquiry into 2022 Victorian floods releases final report
Another Year that Made Me: Linda Burney, 1988
Croak of a Month
The Year That Made Me: Richard Gosling, 2009
Julian Eltinge: America's 'greatest female impersonator'
Women in US politics
Where are the Yazidi, 10 years on
Jack Thompson to deliver the Lingiari lecture
Her inquiry exposed the sexism, racism and homophobia within the UK Metropolitan Police force
The Kamala Harris factor
Tweet of the week
The Year That Made Me: Ruth Wilson, 1975
What can the Gold Coast learn from Paris?
Tamas Wells, academic popstar
An opponent to Viktor Orban emerges from within his own party
What's happened to the refugees who were sent to Nauru and Manus Island?
The backlash against women in the US Secret Service
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