
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


PFAS chemicals, also known as forever chemicals, don’t break down in the environment. They can accumulate in the body and are found to have an array of harmful effects on human health.
A major mapping project has revealed worryingly high levels of PFAS across thousands of sites in the UK. Experts are concerned that not enough is being done to reduce these chemicals from drinking water. They’re urging the government to re-evaluate current regulation. This week we dive into the properties of these chemicals: how dangerous are they and what can be done to protect public health? Professor Crispin Halsall, an environmental chemist from Lancaster University, tells us more.
As charges are brought against four people for stealing and selling on US$1 million of dinosaur bones, we find out about the illegal – and legal – trade in fossils from palaeontologist Professor Steve Brusatte.
New research has discovered the Moon is 40 million years older than we previously thought. Professor Sara Russell, a cosmic mineralogist and planetary scientist from the Natural History Museum, tells us more.
And is there something we can we learn from animals about how to age better? Nicklas Brendborg discusses his book, Jellyfish Age Backwards: Nature’s Secrets to Longevity, which has been shortlisted for the Royal Society Trivedi Science Book Prize.
Presenter: Victoria Gill
BBC Inside Science is produced in collaboration with the Open University.
By BBC Radio 44.4
284284 ratings
PFAS chemicals, also known as forever chemicals, don’t break down in the environment. They can accumulate in the body and are found to have an array of harmful effects on human health.
A major mapping project has revealed worryingly high levels of PFAS across thousands of sites in the UK. Experts are concerned that not enough is being done to reduce these chemicals from drinking water. They’re urging the government to re-evaluate current regulation. This week we dive into the properties of these chemicals: how dangerous are they and what can be done to protect public health? Professor Crispin Halsall, an environmental chemist from Lancaster University, tells us more.
As charges are brought against four people for stealing and selling on US$1 million of dinosaur bones, we find out about the illegal – and legal – trade in fossils from palaeontologist Professor Steve Brusatte.
New research has discovered the Moon is 40 million years older than we previously thought. Professor Sara Russell, a cosmic mineralogist and planetary scientist from the Natural History Museum, tells us more.
And is there something we can we learn from animals about how to age better? Nicklas Brendborg discusses his book, Jellyfish Age Backwards: Nature’s Secrets to Longevity, which has been shortlisted for the Royal Society Trivedi Science Book Prize.
Presenter: Victoria Gill
BBC Inside Science is produced in collaboration with the Open University.

7,713 Listeners

523 Listeners

892 Listeners

1,066 Listeners

302 Listeners

5,472 Listeners

1,806 Listeners

736 Listeners

2,113 Listeners

2,076 Listeners

602 Listeners

90 Listeners

976 Listeners

425 Listeners

822 Listeners

737 Listeners

236 Listeners

333 Listeners

358 Listeners

474 Listeners

367 Listeners

234 Listeners

334 Listeners

3,219 Listeners

111 Listeners

66 Listeners

840 Listeners

536 Listeners

622 Listeners

350 Listeners

266 Listeners

60 Listeners

77 Listeners

0 Listeners