Mega Microbes
Scientists reveal an abundance of life hidden in rocks beneath the world’s oceans and we explore romantic love
Investigations beneath our deep oceans have revealed an immense variety of incredibly hardy microbial life. Investigators even found life after drilling 2.5 km into the rock beneath the oceans. They found microbes that can resist immense pressure and incredible temperatures. They say it’s plausible that life itself could have developed under such conditions.
Comparisons between central and southern Africans, the latter with lighter skins, show that Eurasian genes with an impact on skin colour were introduced into the Southern African population as recently as 2000 years ago. Researchers say the connection is not a direct one, and such genes probably arrived in Africa via the Middle East many years earlier.
Working on ways to improve rice, scientists have used a gene editing technique to encourage asexual reproduction. The idea is to ensure beneficial traits such as drought resistance and high yields are passed down through generations of seeds. This research is a proof of principle, but with the potential to change the nature of the world’s cereal crops.
And how do we assess ancient levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide to compare with today? One method is to look at plant fossils, in particular the size and shape of leaf pores used to exchange gasses.
Loving someone who doesn’t love you in return makes us feel wretched – can science explain why we must suffer? Parental love makes perfect evolutionary sense but romance just seems to have it in for us time after time. CrowdScience listener Leja wants to know why we fall in and out of love.
Crowd Science discovers the irrational things, the impulsive things and the financially ruinous things ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ World Service listeners have done in the name of love and meet the rapper who turned herself into a science subject in an effort to flush out thoughts of her ex-boyfriend.
We delve into our ancestral past and into our brains to find out why romantic love is so central to the human experience.
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- Sun 16 Dec 2018 15:06GMT³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ World Service Americas and the Caribbean
- Sun 16 Dec 2018 16:06GMT³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ World Service News Internet
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Unexpected Elements
The news you know, the science you don't