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Displaying items 2551 - 2575 of 10000 in total

  • How the body heals itself

    Audio
    health
    30 Sep 2024
    Kaimanawa horses.

    Have you ever wondered why, if you bite your cheek, it heals quickly with no scarring.  Audio

  • What 'Jack and Jill' can teach us about capital gains taxes

    News
    New Zealand Politics
    30 Sep 2024
    Housing in Auckland

    Opinion - Superficially, it seems fair to tax income from all sources. Yet it could be anything but, Richard Meade writes.

    What ‘Jack and Jill’ can teach us about the (un)fairness of capital gains taxes
  • Far right wins Austria election, adding to European rightwing surge

    News
    World
    30 Sep 2024
    Herbert Kickl, leader and top candidate of right-wing populist Freedom Party of Austria waves to supporters at the party's election event after exit poll numbers were announced in Vienna, Austria, on 29 September, 2024.

    Germany's chancellor has reiterated his opposition to forming a government with FPO leader Herbert Kickl, although he has not ruled out working with the party.

    Far right wins Austria election, adding to European rightwing surge
  • New speed limits mean more people will die - transport researcher

    News
    New Zealand Politics
    29 Sep 2024
    Speed limit sign

    The Minister of Transport is reversing the reductions in speed limits done by the previous Labour government.

    New speed limits mean more people will die - transport researcher
  • The forecast for the summer

    Audio
    science weather
    29 Sep 2024
    Niwa map showing hot temperatures forecast in the east of NZ

    New Zealander of the Year, international climate scientist Dr Jim Salinger joins us to take a long at the long-term weather predictions for New Zealand's summer months. Audio

  • Argue with Science

    Audio
    science
    29 Sep 2024
    A glistening glass-like visualisation of a complex molecule. Text reads "Argue with Science, with Mary Argue"

    Mary Argue is back guiding us through the latest weird and wonderful headlines from the world of science. Audio

  • Playing Favourites with Judy Bailey

    Audio 28 Sep 2024
    Almost 20 years after reading her final TVNZ news bulletin, beloved broadcaster Judy Bailey writes about the “minefield” of healthy ageing in her new book Evolving.

    When broadcaster Judy Bailey signed off her final news bulletin in 2005, she had no idea the next years would be some of the most fulfilling of her life. Audio

    This audio is not downloadable due to copyright restrictions.

  • Researchers surprised to find marine animal forests in Wellington's shallow waters

    News
    New Zealand science
    27 Sep 2024
    Victoria University researchers have discovered a surprising number of animal ecosystems in Wellington's shallow waters.

    Victoria University researchers have discovered a surprising number of animal ecosystems in Wellington's shallow waters. Audio

    Researchers surprised to find marine animal forests in Wellington's shallow waters
  • Climate protesters take to the streets in several cities

    News
    New Zealand environment
    27 Sep 2024
    School Strike 4 Climate protesters at Puke Ariki Landing in New Plymouth on 27 September 2024, although RNZ's reporter said there were few school aged people present.

climate protest at NP's Puke Ariki Landing ... very few school age folk here

    Students and supporters in Auckland, New Plymouth and Christchurch swapped their books for picket signs as they joined the School Strike 4 Climate protests on Friday. They had multiple demands,...

    School Strike 4 Climate protests expected in several cities
  • Critter of the Week: Manawatawhi paua

    Audio
    science animals
    27 Sep 2024
    Manawatāwhi pāua

    Paua are a national treasure, as iconically Aotearoa as pineapple lumps and kiwi. Paua have a long history as a source of meaty protein and decoration. This week's critter is the Manawatawhi paua… Audio

  • Māori academics ask government to rescind 'colourblind' directive

    News
    Politics Te Ao Māori
    27 Sep 2024
    ACT Party leader David Seymour and National Party finance spokesperson Nicola Willis.

    A group of Māori academics and health workers are asking the government to rescind its recent directive for public services to be based on need, not race

    'Threatens to waste healthcare resources': Māori academics ask government to rescind 'colourblind' directive
  • Palau tells UNGA 'we must unite' to tackle climate crisis

    News
    Pacific Palau
    27 Sep 2024
    Palau's Vice-President Uduch Sengebau Senior speaking at the 79th Session of the UN General Assembly in New York on 26 September 2024.

    Uduch Sengebau Senior told world leaders that the global response to the climate crisis "is a matter of life and death" and "science, conservation, and the well-being of people" must be prioritised.

    'We must unite': Palau tells world leaders climate crisis 'a matter of life and death'
  • Frigid alien planet may offer a glimpse at Earth's distant future

    News
    World science
    27 Sep 2024
    The white dwarf shown in the illustration is one of several that an international team of astronomers has been studying. Called ZTF J0923+4236, the star exhibits a series of dips in its brightness. The team, led by Amornrat Aungwerojwit from Naresuan University, Thailand, and Boris T. Gänsicke from Warwick University, UK, has attributed these changes in brightness to clumps of dusty and rocky material that are bound to the star in a highly elongated orbit.This material, that believe, is due to planets that are in the process of disintegrating. Eventually these clumps collide with the star and pollute its atmosphere. (Photo by MARK GARLICK/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRA / MGA / Science Photo Library via AFP)

    The first rocky planet ever spotted orbiting a burned out star called a white dwarf offers a glimpse of what may be in store for Earth billions of years from now.

    Frigid alien planet may offer a glimpse at Earth's distant future
  • Canterbury student composer's work premieres with Chch Symphony

    Audio
    music arts
    27 Sep 2024
    Alexandra Hope Watson

    Alexandra Hope Watson, the Canterbury University maths and music whiz who's transformed Lewis Carroll's nonsensical poems into a musical for the Christchuch Symphony Orchestra.

      Audio

  • Ending 'rivalry' between weather agencies makes sense - forecaster

    News
    New Zealand science
    27 Sep 2024
    Philip Duncan, CEO Weather Watch

    An independent weather forecaster says merging MetService and NIWA is a smart decision, but many challenges remain for the sector. Audio

    Ending 'long-running rivalry' between weather agencies makes sense - forecaster
  • NIWA to take over MetService in forecaster merger

    News
    New Zealand Politics
    26 Sep 2024
    National MP Judith Collins

    The merger will mark the end of a long-running feud between the two organisations.

    NIWA to take over MetService in forecaster merger
  • 'Accelerate efforts without delay': Nauru president on deep sea mining

    News
    Pacific Nauru
    26 Sep 2024
    Nauru President David Adeang at the 79th Session of the UNGA in New York. 25 September 2024

    President David Adeang has told global leaders at the United Nations that the world will miss out on decarbonising the planet if deep sea mining does not start immediately.

    'We must accelerate our efforts without delay': Nauru president on deep sea mining at UNGA
  • NASA predicts 15cm of sea-level rise in the next 30 years

    News
    Pacific
    26 Sep 2024
    The Maritime Academy is flooded at every high tide on the island of Amatuku. According to a former student, the litoral has lost ground for ten years.
The rising waters should make the Pacific low islands unviable long before they disappear.
L'academie maritime est inondee a chaque maree haute sur l'ile d'Amatuku. Selon un ancien eleve, le litoral a perdu du terrain depuis une dizaine d'annees.
La montee des eaux devrait rendre les iles basses du Pacifique invivables bien avant qu'elles ne disparaissent. (Photo by THEO ROUBY / Hans Lucas / Hans Lucas via AFP)

    NASA also said this amount of rise will occur regardless of whether greenhouse gas emissions change in the coming years. Audio

    NASA predicts 15cm of sea-level rise for Pacific Islands in the next 30 years
  • Why chronic pain is the mystery many doctors still can't understand

    News
    New Zealand health
    26 Sep 2024
    Woman with sciatic nerve pain in her lower back. (Photo by MICROGEN IMAGES/SCIENCE PHOTO LI / SMD / Science Photo Library via AFP)

    A huge lack of understanding of chronic pain means patients are missing out on potentially life-changing treatment. Audio

    Why chronic pain is the mystery many doctors still can't understand
  • What popular TV shows get wrong about forensic science

    News
    World Television
    26 Sep 2024
    Forensic, csi and swab for dna at crime scene for medical investigation, research analysis and evidence inspection. Science, expert in hazmat and case investigator with observation or search at night.

    Ask a forensic scientist to recommend a crime show that accurately portrays their work and they'll probably tell you they can't. Video, Audio

    Why forensic science is nothing like the popular TV investigation shows when it comes to solving crimes
  • How to turn children into lifelong readers

    News
    New Zealand Comment & Analysis
    26 Sep 2024

    Opinion: NZ is one of a number of countries that are overhauling the way reading is taught at the primary school level, but Elaine Reese argues that families still play a critical role in turning a…

    Fostering a love of stories in a child’s first years is key to lifelong reading
  • Anxiety and the brain-body connection

    News
    New Zealand Our Changing World
    26 Sep 2024
    Two women with long dark hair and glasses smile and sit next to a laptop on a metal trolley in front of a white wall. On the tray underneath the laptop is a complex machine with a long tube, that the woman on the right is holding in her hands.

    Anxiety starts with thoughts in the brain that then trigger physical symptoms. Researchers are exploring this brain-body connection and how treatments can help in different ways.

    Anxiety and the brain-body connection
  • Reversal of Taranaki oil and gas ban passes first reading

    News
    Politics business
    26 Sep 2024
    A drilling rig commissioned by oil giant OMV arrives in New Zealand to drill 12 exploratory drilling wells off the coast of Taranaki. Credit: Geoff Reid

    "New Zealand must look after itself before it cares for the planet", Resources Minister Shane Jones said, with the coalition arguing exploration will deliver energy security.

    Reversal of Taranaki oil and gas ban passes first reading
  • Our Changing World's Claire Concannon on what makes a wobbly polar vortex

    Audio
    science
    25 Sep 2024
    Ice in the Weddell Sea, Antarctica.

    Claire Concannon from Our Changing World joins Nights to chat about some interesting stories in the science and science-adjacent worlds. Audio

  • Our Changing World – Interoception and anxiety

    Audio
    science health
    25 Sep 2024
    A man wearing a light blue hoodie sits on a brown sofa with his hands obscuring his face, surrounded by boxes.

    We all experience anxiety – when our brains look into the future and imagine bad things happening. Audio

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