Long abandoned metal mines are having a huge impact on rivers across the UK. BBC Inside Science reporter Patrick Hughes visits Cwmystwyth in Wales, where he finds lead, zinc and cadmium seeping into waterways. It’s the costly legacy left after hundreds of years of mining.
Roma Agrawal breaks down our modern world into seven essential basic inventions in her book Nuts and Bolts which has been shortlisted for the Royal Society Science Book Prize. She talks to Marnie about the surprising history behind some of these inventions.
And, as a cryogenic tank of bull semen is stolen from a farm in County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, it got us thinking: how can selective breeding help reduce carbon and methane emissions from cattle? Professor Eileen Wall from Scotland’s Rural College tells us more.
Presenter: Marnie Chesterton Producers: Harrison Lewis, Hannah Robins and Patrick Hughes Editor: Richard Collings Production Co-ordinator: Jana Bennett-Holesworth
BBC Inside Science is produced in Cardiff by BBC Wales and West in collaboration with the Open University.
Violins - Social networks and cliques in great tits and snow monkeys - Exploring DNA and art
The moral brain, stem cell developments, ancient DNA in cave dirt, mangrove forest
Homo naledi, First humans in America, Dark matter detector, New theory of dark matter
Cassini’s death, scrapping diesel, weather balloon, satellites monitoring volcanos
23andMe Genetic Sequencing, Human Knockout genes, Coral Bleaching
Creation of island Britain, Sleep gene, Mary Kelly forensics, Global Tree Search survey
Climate change and extreme weather; Primate brain size; Earthquake forecasting; Planet 9
Comet 67P images; Etna eruption; Brain navigation; Octopus intelligence
Boaty McBoatface in Antarctica, Aeroplane biofuels, Bakhshali manuscript, Goldilocks zones
Rise of the Robots: 3. Where is my mind?
Cells and Celluloid: Aliens on Film
Rise of the Robots: 2. More human than human
Rise of the Robots: 1. The history of things to come
Earth's Earliest Life, The Benefits of Pollution, Sexuality and Science and New ideas on Evolution
The perils of fake science news, The neanderthal inside us, What The Beatles really sang - statistically speaking
Science and cyber security, Dinosaur babies, Winston Churchill and level crossings
Measuring human impact on earth, Awards for engineers, Sounds of space junk.
Wildlife trafficking, New quantum computers, Ancient bird beaks, Glassblowing.
Crime, volcanoes, ghosts and how we are influenced by the genes of unrelated others
Antarctic science rescue, Killing cancer with viruses, Measuring wind from space and the Last man on the moon
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