 Exploring the mysterious lives of and a threatened marine mammal.Lucy Keith Diagne, Sea to Shore February 2012
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 Bioluminescence expert Edie Widder chooses a sneaky deep sea fish for Critter of the MonthEdie Widder, Ocean Conservation and Research Association February 2012
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 We explore how chemists at the University of Bristol are finding new molecules to monitor and treat diabetes...Charles Rennie, University of Bristol February 2012
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 Richard Hollingham explores the hotlist of conservation issues facing the world today...Bill Sutherland, University of Cambridge February 2012
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 Could diet foods be making you fat? We investigate whether low calorie foods such as sweeteners and low fat alternatives can fool our brains into underestimating the energy content of the full fat versions...Susie Swithers, Purdue University February 2012
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 The eating habits we develop early in life can be very hard to change. Marion Hetherington discusses why this is and how it could be changed...Marion Hetherington, University of Leeds February 2012
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 Introducing new species has proved disasterous for the Australian ecosystem. So it's no wonder that ecologist David Bowman has met controversy with his suggestion that, to stablise the system, we may need to introduce even more...David Bowman, University of Tasmania February 2012
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 How scientists are eavesdropping using electrodes, predicting eruptions using magma, healing wounds with honey and massaging away your aches and pains...Brian Pasley, University of California, Berkeley; Tim Druitt, Blaise Pascal University; Sarah Maddocks, University of Cardiff; Mark Tornopolsky, McMaster University February 2012
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 J. Emmett Duffy, Virginia Institute of Marine Science January 2012
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 2012 began with gale force winds, localised flooding and travel disruptions in the UK. But not everyone is sorry to see the stormy weather. Here's Professor Robin Hogan telling us how he tracks, and predicts, thunderstorms..... Professor Robin Hogan, Reading University January 2012
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 When Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin brought back the first samples of moon rock in 1969, scientists were surprised to see telltale signs in the material that the moon had once had a magnetic field – much like the one we have around the Earth. Now, another look at one of those 1969 samples has revealed something very unexpected...Erin Shea, MIT January 2012
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 How mapping a mushroom trip could provide treatments for depression, the gene behind a winning racehorse, the world's first magnetic soap and the social networks of our ancestors...Robin Carhart-Harris, Imperial College London; Emmeline Hill, University College Dublin; Julian Eastoe, University of Bristol; Coren Apicella, Harvard Medical School. January 2012
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 The Mid Infra Red Instrument, or MIRI, is due to fly on the James Webb Space Telescope, and will observe distant galaxies and cold gas and dust. It can observe light with a wavelength of 5 to 27 microns, which is virtually impossible on Earth, where it is absorbed by the atmosphere. MIRI hopes to see the most distant galaxies and shed light on the distribution of hydrogen gas in the universe...Dr Helen Walker, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory January 2012
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 Robert Massey returns with a roundup of news from the Royal Astronomical Society. This month; The history of astronomical imaging, Near Earth Objects and Auroras above northern Britain...Dr Robert Massey, Royal Astronomical Society January 2012
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 Gravitational lensing is allowing us to detect things we otherwise wouldn't be able to see. Oxford University’s Dr Lance Miller explains to Andrew Pontzen how we can use distortions caused by the gravitational pull of dark matter to explore its distribution...Dr Lance Miller, Oxford University January 2012
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 An international consortium last year confirmed that aspirin can protect people with a genetic predisposition to bowel cancer. Now, they are turning their attention to finding out what Vitamin D could do for cancer...Professor Sir John Burn, Newcastle University January 2012
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 We explore the disovery of new species in the hydrothermal vents of Antarctica...Katrin Linse and Ali Graham, British Antarctic Survey January 2012
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 How is Vitamin D linked to autoimmunity and the central nervous system? With us to discuss the research is Prof. George Ebers from Oxford University, expert in Multiple Sclerosis....Professor George Ebers, Oxford University January 2012
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 Introducing Vitamin D: how deficient are we? And what disorders are linked with deficiency?Elina Hypponen, University College London January 2012
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 Apart from food, a major source of vitamin D is exposure to sunlight which makes the hormone in the skin. So, some sun is good but therein lies the rub because sunlight can also cause skin cancer. Kat Arney discussing how to balance between the two...Kat Arney, Cancer Research UK January 2012
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