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Displaying items 5226 - 5250 of 10000 in total

  • Canyon like slip in Hawke's Bay

    Audio
    science life and society
    28 Jun 2023
    Huge hillside crack at OngaOnga in Hawke's Bay

    A new canyon like slip has appeared in a central Hawke's Bay farm and it's getting plenty of local attention.

    Matt Holden who owns the Ongaonga farm says the land moved in the middle of the night and… Audio

  • Health funding money to be spent studying quitting vaping

    Audio
    science health
    28 Jun 2023
    Electronic cigarettes heat a liquid to produce a vapour that people inhale, with some liquids including nicotine.

    The Health Research Council of New Zealand will pump more than 50 million dollars into research on pressing health issues. The funding will be spread across 44 project grants, one of which includes a… Audio

  • Is transport in Aotearoa/NZ on a road to nowhere?

    Audio
    transport
    28 Jun 2023
    Cars stuck in gridlock traffic during heavy rain in Auckland on 9 May, 2023.

    What is going on with transport in Aotearoa? Prof. Simon Kingham explores what the evidence tells us about transport now and in the future, at Raising the Bar Christchurch 2023. Audio

  • Robots will help scientists better understand deep sea climate trends

    News
    New Zealand science
    27 Jun 2023
    ARGO voyage 2023 - Nathalie Zilberman (UCSD) and Charlie Branham (Seabird Scientific) on board NIWA's RV Tangaroa working on the CTD - an instrument used to calibrate sensors for argo floats.

    Scientists have returned from a research expedition in the south-west Pacific Ocean, where autonomous robots have been deployed to send data about deep-sea climate trends.

    Robots will help scientists better understand deep sea climate trends
  • Lab grown meat in US could mean big money for NZ business

    Audio
    food science
    27 Jun 2023

    The green light for lab grown meat to be sold in American restaurants and supermarkets could mean big business for a New Zealand company producing the "seeds" the flesh can be cultivated from. For the… Video, Audio

  • Gretchen Rubin: Life in Five Senses

    Audio
    health author interview
    27 Jun 2023
    Life in Five Senses book cover

    Studying the science of happiness doesn't always make you happy. Gretchen Rubin is considered a global expert on happiness, with her podcast and books about finding ways to be happier. But she felt… Audio

  • Planning to build around climate change factors in the future

    Audio
    science environment
    27 Jun 2023
    Cars drive through surface flooding in central Auckland as rain pelts the region on 9 May 2023.

    As we've seen in recent weather events, floods and slips go hand in hand. Martin Brook is an Associate Professor of Applied Geology at the University of Auckland. He has studied slopes in both… Audio

  • Researchers find DNA abnormalities that could help fight aggressive cancer

    News
    New Zealand science
    27 Jun 2023
    A digital rendering of DNA helix molecules, in a bright blue colour

    DNA abnormalities leading to the aggressive spread of bowel cancer have been identified by Otago University researchers. Audio

    Researchers find DNA abnormalities that could help fight aggressive cancer
  • Ex-Pacific leaders want UN action on cleaning up shipping industry

    News
    Pacific
    27 Jun 2023
    no caption

    A group of former Pacific leaders want the UN agency mandated to regulate international shipping "to take meaningful strides" to end the industry's reliance on dirty fossil fuels.

    Ex-Pacific leaders want UN action on cleaning up shipping industry
  • Researchers find DNA abnormaties linked to spread of bowel cancer

    Audio
    science health
    27 Jun 2023
    Generic DNA helix

    Otago University researchers have identified DNA abnormalities that lead to the aggressive spread of bowel cancer, Aotearoa's second highest cause of cancer deaths.

    The researchers studied tumours… Audio

  • Pacific kids contracting meningicoccal in NZ likely to increase this winter

    Audio
    Pacific health
    27 Jun 2023
    no caption

    Pacific children contracting meningicoccal disease likely to increase this year. Audio

  • Immigration drive hasn't recruited a single GP in nearly 8 months

    Audio
    health immigration
    26 Jun 2023
    Image of a doctor holding a smart phone

    An Immigration Service set up by Health New Zealand in October still hasn't recruited any overseas-based GPs almost eight months later. Te Whatu Ora's International Recruitment Centre aims to make it… Audio

  • Test kits planned so farmers can measure phosphate levels in waterways

    News
    Country science
    26 Jun 2023
    FOR WATER TAX story - Generic water from farm

    Scientists at University of Canterbury are developing a tool which will allow farmers to measure phosphates in their local waterways.

    Test kits planned so farmers can measure phosphate levels in waterways
  • How Antarctica's 'landfast' ice is dwindling and why that's bad news

    News
    New Zealand science
    26 Jun 2023
    Scientists traversing smooth landfast ice to take core samples near Casey Station, Antarctica.

    To understand wide global phenomena such as changes in ocean currents and warming trends, a team of Antarctic ice researchers say scientific models need to include key missing information.

    How Antarctica’s 'landfast' ice is dwindling and why that’s bad news
  • European Commission research into idea of weather manipulation

    Audio
    science
    26 Jun 2023
    An image of a blue sky with some clouds.

    Have you heard of geoengineering, or weather manipulation?

    According to a report in the Financial Times, the European Commission will this week call for international cooperation on launching… Audio

  • Wagner, Prigozhin, Putin and Shoigu: Bitter rivalries that led to a rebellion

    News
    World conflict
    26 Jun 2023
    This video grab taken from handout footage posted on June 24, 2023 on the Telegram account of the press service of Concord -- a company linked to the chief of Russian mercenary group Wagner, Yevgeny Prigozhin -- shows Yevgeny Prigozhin speaking inside the headquarters of the Russian southern military district in the city of Rostov-on-Don. The head of Wagner mercenary group Yevgeny Prigozhin announced on June 24, 2023 that he was inside the army headquarters in Rostov-on-Don in southern Russia, and that his fighters controlled the city's military sites. (Photo by Handout / TELEGRAM/ @concordgroup_official / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / Telegram channel of Concord group" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

    In the end, the Wagner mutiny lasted less than 24 hours. But the toxic cocktail of jealousy, rivalry and ambition that gave rise to it has been months, if not years, in the making.

    Wagner, Prigozhin, Putin and Shoigu: Bitter rivalries that led to a rebellion
  • On Thinning Ice: how dwindling glaciers reveal climate change

    Audio
    science
    25 Jun 2023
    Dr Heather Purdie testing glacier ice

    Assoc. Prof. Heather Purdie explains why glaciers are the perfect barometer of climate change. A highlight from the University of Canterbury's Raising the Bar Christchurch 2023 series. Audio

  • One weird trick for getting uncritical media coverage

    Audio
    science media
    25 Jun 2023
    Furniture at Work UK's digitally-generated model 'Anna' working from her bed.

    Most publications would never dream of running advertising for free, or publishing a highly ideological press release verbatim, but they may do so if the same information is presented in the form of… Audio

  • One weird trick for getting uncritical media coverage

    News
    Mediawatch science
    25 Jun 2023
    Furniture at Work UK's digitally-generated model 'Anna' working from her bed.

    Most publications would never dream of running advertising for free, or publishing a highly ideological press release verbatim, but they may do so if the same information is presented in the form of…

    Audio

    One weird trick for getting uncritical media coverage
  • Regular daytime naps could be key to a healthy aging brain, new study suggests

    News
    New Zealand science
    25 Jun 2023
    High angle view of woman sleeping in bed. (Photo by Eric Audras / Photononstop / Photononstop via AFP)

    Naps. They have the potential to soothe anything from an overwhelmed toddler to a raging hangover. But could they also make your brain bigger?

    Regular daytime naps could be key to a healthy aging brain, new study suggests
  • Is coffee doing your garden more harm than good?

    Audio
    food science
    25 Jun 2023

    Our compost bins are full of coffee grounds, and some gardening experts not only advocate that, but also recommend sprinkling coffee grounds directly on the garden. But in the latest New Scientist… Audio

  • Dr David Beresford: How to avoid insect bites

    Audio
    science
    25 Jun 2023
    Mosquito feeding on a human, computer illustration. (Photo by SEBASTIAN KAULITZKI/SCIENCE PHOT / SKX / Science Photo Library via AFP)

    Although our biting insects take a break in Winter, this week saw the shortest day of the year, so forgive us for looking ahead to the warm summer months. Are insects more likely to bite you when… Audio

  • Eyes to the sky as annual garden bird survey begins

    News
    New Zealand science
    24 Jun 2023
    Piwakawaka or fantail are common in gardens around New Zealand.

    People are encouraged to head to the garden over the next nine days to spend an hour counting all the birds they see and hear.

    Eyes to the sky as annual garden bird survey begins
  • What was the ‘catastrophic implosion’ of the Titan submersible? An expert explains

    News
    World science
    24 Jun 2023
    This undated image courtesy of OceanGate Expeditions, shows their Titan submersible beginning a descent. Rescue teams expanded their search underwater on June 20, 2023, as they raced against time to find a Titan deep-diving tourist submersible that went missing near the wreck of the Titanic with five people on board and limited oxygen. All communication was lost with the 21-foot (6.5-meter) Titan craft during a descent June 18 to the Titanic, which sits at a depth of crushing pressure more than two miles (nearly four kilometers) below the surface of the North Atlantic. (Photo by Handout / OceanGate Expeditions / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / OceanGate Expeditions" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

    Deep underwater, the Titan submersible would have been crushed in less than a second once a defect cracked the hull.

    What was the ‘catastrophic implosion’ of the Titan submersible? An expert explains
  • Naomi Oreskes: how Big Business made us love the free market

    Audio
    business life and society
    24 Jun 2023
    Naomi Oreskes in Copley Park in 2017

    In their new book The Big Myth, Professor Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway document the rise of "market fundamentalism" over the 20th century, outlining Big Business's push to equate the free market… Audio

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