Advertisement

humans-iconHumans
clock-iconPUBLISHED

Break It Down - The Biggest Science News Of 2024 So Far

Join us each week for a bite-size guide to this week in science, with hosts Eleanor Higgs and Rachael Funnell.

Charlie Haigh headshot

Charlie Haigh

Charlie Haigh headshot

Charlie Haigh

Marketing Coordinator & Writer

Charlie is the Marketing Coordinator and Writer for IFLScience, she’s currently completing a undergraduate degree in Forensic Psychology.

Marketing Coordinator & Writer

share1Shares
All the biggest science news stories of the week

Here's what we've discussed so far on Break It Down.

Image credit: Edited by IFLScience

Welcome to Break It Down, 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. Here’s what you may have missed in episodes 1 to 15, available on all your favorite podcast apps: Apple Podcast, Spotify, Google Podcast, Podbean, Amazon Music, and more.

Advertisement

 

Episode 15 - Sexy Neanderthals, Head Transplants, And Dark Extinction

This week on Break It Down, we now know when humans and Neanderthals hooked up, could a human head transplant ever be realistic, a dino fossil skin preserved like glass has both scales and feathers, sometimes stars completely vanish, a skull from China tells us more about the Dragon Man, and we delve into the concept of dark extinctions.

Sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…

Links

Humans and Neanderthals

Human head transplants

Advertisement

Dino skin fossil

Vanishing stars

Dragon Man lineage

Dark extinctions

Advertisement

Euclid images

Heart symbol video

 

Episode 14 - Hot Dinosaurs, Alien Megastructures, And Reaching Point Nemo

This week on Break It Down, COVID’s new FLiRT variants, when and which dinosaurs went warm-blooded, could a lost river explain the pyramids, the search for alien megastructures, the shrinking Y chromosome, and what’s it like sailing to Point Nemo? Really hard, apparently.

Advertisement

Sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…

Links

FLiRT

Hot dinosaurs

Lost river

Advertisement

Alien megastructures

Shrinking Y chromosome

Point Nemo

Point Nemo video

Advertisement

CURIOUS Live register

CURIOUS, May issue

Poles of Inaccessibility

Fox in a sink-hole

Advertisement

 

Episode 13 - Talking Whales, Dinosauroids, and Psychedelic Milk Toads?

This week in Break It Down, scientists discover the “sperm whale phonetic alphabet”, AstraZeneca pull their COVID vaccine from the shelves, why a weak magnetic field might be a good thing for life on Earth, rock art reveals that the Sahara looked a little different 4,000 years ago, toads might be helping treat depression, and what on Earth is a dinosauroid?!

Sit back, relax, and let's Break It Down...

Links

Whale alphabet

Advertisement

AstraZeneca pull their COVID vaccine

Magnetic fields and complex life

Rock art

Toads as antidepressants

Advertisement

Dinosauroids

Virtual event

What is “virgin birth”

 

Episode 12 - Alpaca Sex, Brainy T. Rex, And Could Earth Have Rings?

This week in Break It Down, the debate on T. rex intelligence rages on, a world-first video shows an orangutan applying leaves as medicine, the most complete Neanderthal gets a face, why alpaca sex is so weird that no other mammal does it like them (that we know of), the mystery of a giant hole in Antarctic ice solved, and could Earth ever get its own rings?

Sit back, relax, and let's Break It Down...

Links

Brainy T. rex

Dr Orangutan

Advertisement

Neanderthal face

Alpaca sex

Antarctic ice hole

Earth’s rings

Advertisement

Register for CURIOUS Live

Megaliths

Shamrock the green puppy

 

Episode 11 - Gassy Uranus, Giant Megaraptors, And The Pharaoh's Curse

This week in Break It Down, we explore why Uranus might contain more methane than we thought, just what is happening to bacteria on the ISS, quite how long animals have been making their own light for, why carvings on a bear bone are culturally important, giant megaraptor footprints in China, and whether anything spooky might happen if you dare to enter the Pharaoh's tomb.

Sit back, relax, and let's Break It Down...

Links

Methane on Uranus

Space bacteria

Advertisement

Glowing animals

Bear bone culture

Megaraptor

The Pharaoh's Curse

Advertisement

Subscribe to our newsletters

Why is the Dead Sea so salty?

 

Episode 10 - Tiny Titanosaurs, Giant Snakes, And Transatlantic Heart Transplants

This week in Break It Down, a new species of tiny titanosaur is compared to a cow, a 47-million-year-old snake becomes the largest ever, an RNA breakthrough brings us closer to "universal vaccines", a heart flies 7,000 kilometers to its recipient, we question Stonehenge's relationship to the Moon, and why the philosophy of science matters in the modern day.

Advertisement

Sit back, relax, and let's Break It Down...

Links

Tiny titanosaur

Giant snake

Vaccine breakthrough

Advertisement

Stonehenge and the Moon

Transatlantic heart

Philosophy of science

The largest marine reptile

Advertisement

Avocado testicles

 

Episode 9 - More Whale Sex, Pet Foxes, And The B.O.A.T

This week in Break It Down, 12-million-year-old snails reveal the oldest preserved fossil pigments, the violent mating dance of blue whales is caught on camera, scientists investigate the source of space’s brightest-ever explosion, foxes may have been the OG domestic canid, when is the North Star not the North Star, and what the hell even is a “henge”?

Sit back, relax, and let's Break It Down...

Advertisement

Links

Old snails

Whale sex

The BOAT

Fox friends

Advertisement

Not the North Star

A “henge” or not a henge

Golden mole

Etna’s smoke rings

Advertisement

 

Episode 8 - Space Rainbows, Ancient Animal Art, And Heart-Eyed Toads

This week in Break It Down, a rainbow-like glory is detected beyond our Solar System, a sand-slab stingray may be the oldest animal art, ancient etchings in Peru may depict psychedelic music, scientists complete the world’s largest digital camera, and a toad with heart-shaped pupils. Plus, how far can a bird fly without flapping? Turns out, pretty damn far.

Sit back, relax, and let's Break It Down...

Links

Glory in space

Advertisement

Sand-slab stingray

Psychedelic rock art

Largest digital camera

Heart-shaped pupils

Advertisement

Fly without flapping

Subscribe for further info on CURIOUS Live

Ligers V Tigons

 

Episode 7 - Black Holes, Barbie Pigs, And The Apocaclipse

This week in Break It Down, why the solar eclipse can be fatal, Barbie pigs 5,000 meters below the sea, world-first cooperative mimicry in two spiders pretending to be a flower, the first image of magnetic fields around black hole Sagittarius A*, why climate change might be about to change the time, and are men really more likely to be psychopaths than women? The science appears to suggest otherwise.

So sit back, relax, and let's Break It Down...

Links

Apocaclipse

Barbie pigs

Advertisement

Flower spiders

Black hole’s magnetic fields

Earth’s shape-changing time

Female psychopaths

Advertisement

Reptile house

Childbirth VS kick to the balls

 

Episode 6 - Scandalous Pyramids, Quantum Tornadoes, And The Longest Eclipse

This week in Break It Down, a hill becomes a pyramid and then a hill again, quantum tornadoes teach us about black holes, a living human gets a pig kidney for the first time, Homer’s Iliad helps us find shipwrecks, the world’s rarest fish makes a comeback – one ridiculous baby at a time – and we find out about the longest eclipses on, and off, record.

Advertisement

Sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…

Links

It’s a pyramid

It might not be a pyramid

It isn’t a pyramid

Advertisement

Getting it wrong is a part of science

Quantum tornadoes

Pig kidney xenotransplant

Homer’s Iliad shipwrecks

Advertisement

World’s rarest fish

Longest eclipses

Equinox VS solstice

 

Episode 5 - Superb Nova, Space Crime, And Eclipse Tortoises

This week in Break It Down, a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see a nova, astroforensic science, why everybody thinks male mammals are so big, the world’s oldest body piercings, 70 years in an iron lung, and the strange things animals do during a total solar eclipse. We’re looking at you, Galápagos tortoises.

Sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…

Links

Nova

Space crime

Advertisement

Mammalian bodies

Oldest piercings

Iron lung

Animals in a solar eclipse

Advertisement

Mammals trailer

Unexplained anomalous phenomena

Coral joy

 

Episode 4 - De-Extincting Mammoths, The Oldest Fossil Forest, And Elephant Burials

This week in Break It Down, we talk de-extincting the mammoth, the world’s oldest fossil forest, elephant burials, hypervaccination (and by hyper, we mean 217 COVID vaccinations in 29 months), a small Pacific nation that spans all four hemispheres, and a contentious question on geologists’ lips: are we in the Anthropocene?

Sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…

Links

From elephants to mammoths

De-extincting a dinosaur

Advertisement

Fossil forest

Anthropocene

Elephant burials

Hypervaccination

Advertisement

All four hemispheres

Lost continents

Toki Pona

Living fossils

Advertisement

 

Episode 3 - Whale Sex, Smashing Asteroids, And More (Giant) Whales

This week in Break It Down, the first-ever photographs of humpbacks humping involves two males, NASA changes the shape of an asteroid, a tiny fish makes a big din, some very old megaliths in Peru, the heaviest animal on the planet, and the bizarre story of one of the biggest astrophysical discoveries in recent times.

Sit back, relax, and let’s break it down…

Links

Queer nature

Advertisement

Male whales

Megaliths

Tiny noisy fish

Heaviest animal

Advertisement

Smashing asteroids

Gravitational waves

Earth Core Video

Perpetual Stew Video

Advertisement

Space Spiders And Adam Sandler

 

Episode 2 - Giant Anacondas, Small Stars, And Lab-Grown Testicles

This week in Break It Down, we discuss how a Will Smith series led to the discovery of a new species of giant anaconda, plus the smallest star ever discovered, lab-grown testicles, an electric vehicle breakthrough, sophisticated Neanderthal glue, and how to destroy a dinner party by dropping the question: is math discovered or invented?

Sit back, relax, and let’s break it down…

Advertisement

Links

New species of giant anaconda

Smallest star ever discovered

Lab-grown testicles

Electric vehicle breakthrough

Advertisement

Neanderthal glue

Math

 

Episode 1 - Shingrays, Space Lasers, And Pink Fairy Armadillos

This week in Break It Down, we discuss whether or not an aquarium in the US is about to become home to the world’s first “shingray,” how scientists are sending messages and power from space, a groundbreaking cancer breakthrough, fossil forgeries, and what on Earth a pink fairy armadillo is.

Advertisement

Sit back, relax, and let’s break it down…

Links

Shingray

Space lasers and radio messages

Cancer breakthrough

Advertisement

Fossil forgeries

Power from space

Pink fairy armadillos

The oral microbiome

Advertisement

Bias In Science with Subhadra Das

CURIOUS Feb issue


ARTICLE POSTED IN

humans-iconHumans
FOLLOW ONNEWSGoogele News