
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Set in the year 2220, this holiday puzzle episode blends science fiction, real scientific legacies, and mathematical reasoning into an immersive problem-solving adventure. The United Nations Time-Travel Division recruits four brilliant scientists, each descended from historically significant scientific families, and sends them back to 2019 with a radical mission: erase the year 2020 from the timeline.
What follows is a multi-step logic and distance puzzle involving self-driving hover cars, state capitals, precise velocity calculations, and a final anagram that reveals what humanity might have gained if an entire year of global disruption never happened. This episode invites listeners to actively engage with math, geography, and history, using real tools like Google Maps to solve a futuristic mystery.
What You'll Learn in This Episode
1. How Scientific Lineage Shapes Discovery Across Centuries - Meet four fictional descendants of real Nobel-winning scientists, including the Curie family, the Mosers, Isabella and Jerome Karle, and Jane and Alexander Marcet. This episode highlights how scientific knowledge, curiosity, and impact can echo across generations, shaping both history and imagined futures.
2. How Distance, Speed, and Direction Combine in Real-World Math - Using detailed velocity changes, directional turns, and travel times, listeners calculate the total linear distance each hover car travels to reach Niagara Falls. The puzzle reinforces applied math concepts, including unit conversion, cumulative distance, and approximation, all grounded in real geographic constraints.
3. How Geography and Logic Reveal Hidden Patterns - By tracing each scientist's route from an unknown state capital to Niagara Falls, listeners identify likely originating cities. The first letters of each capital form an anagram, encouraging pattern recognition and synthesis, and leading to a final conceptual answer tied to life without a pandemic.
How the Puzzle Works
Questions the Episode Asks You to Solve
This episode rewards careful listening, note-taking, and methodical reasoning, making it ideal for puzzle lovers, educators, and anyone who enjoys thoughtful holiday challenges.
đ Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com đ To buy my book Hypatia: The Sum of Her Life on Amazon, visit https://a.co/d/g3OuP9h
đ Let's Connect!Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/mathsciencehistory.bsky.social Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/math.science.history Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mathsciencehistory LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/math-science-history/ Threads: https://www.threads.com/@math.science.history Mastodon: https://[email protected] YouTube: Math! Science! History! - YouTube Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/mathsciencehistory
đ§ Enjoying the Podcast?
â Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal
Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform
Check out our merch: https://www.mathsciencehistory.com/the-store
Music: All music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Selections from The Little Prince by Lloyd Rodgers
Until next time, carpe diem!
All music is public domain. Little Prince by Lloyd Rogers. We Wish You a Merry Christmas by the U.S. Naval Academy. Ambient 03 by Sscheidl at Pixabay. A Journey Beyond by Christian Bodhi.
By Gabrielle Birchak4.7
1313 ratings
Set in the year 2220, this holiday puzzle episode blends science fiction, real scientific legacies, and mathematical reasoning into an immersive problem-solving adventure. The United Nations Time-Travel Division recruits four brilliant scientists, each descended from historically significant scientific families, and sends them back to 2019 with a radical mission: erase the year 2020 from the timeline.
What follows is a multi-step logic and distance puzzle involving self-driving hover cars, state capitals, precise velocity calculations, and a final anagram that reveals what humanity might have gained if an entire year of global disruption never happened. This episode invites listeners to actively engage with math, geography, and history, using real tools like Google Maps to solve a futuristic mystery.
What You'll Learn in This Episode
1. How Scientific Lineage Shapes Discovery Across Centuries - Meet four fictional descendants of real Nobel-winning scientists, including the Curie family, the Mosers, Isabella and Jerome Karle, and Jane and Alexander Marcet. This episode highlights how scientific knowledge, curiosity, and impact can echo across generations, shaping both history and imagined futures.
2. How Distance, Speed, and Direction Combine in Real-World Math - Using detailed velocity changes, directional turns, and travel times, listeners calculate the total linear distance each hover car travels to reach Niagara Falls. The puzzle reinforces applied math concepts, including unit conversion, cumulative distance, and approximation, all grounded in real geographic constraints.
3. How Geography and Logic Reveal Hidden Patterns - By tracing each scientist's route from an unknown state capital to Niagara Falls, listeners identify likely originating cities. The first letters of each capital form an anagram, encouraging pattern recognition and synthesis, and leading to a final conceptual answer tied to life without a pandemic.
How the Puzzle Works
Questions the Episode Asks You to Solve
This episode rewards careful listening, note-taking, and methodical reasoning, making it ideal for puzzle lovers, educators, and anyone who enjoys thoughtful holiday challenges.
đ Explore more on our website: mathsciencehistory.com đ To buy my book Hypatia: The Sum of Her Life on Amazon, visit https://a.co/d/g3OuP9h
đ Let's Connect!Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/mathsciencehistory.bsky.social Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/math.science.history Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mathsciencehistory LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/math-science-history/ Threads: https://www.threads.com/@math.science.history Mastodon: https://[email protected] YouTube: Math! Science! History! - YouTube Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/mathsciencehistory
đ§ Enjoying the Podcast?
â Support the Show: Coffee!! PayPal
Leave a review! It helps more people discover the show! Share this episode with friends & fellow history buffs! Subscribe on your favorite podcast platform
Check out our merch: https://www.mathsciencehistory.com/the-store
Music: All music is public domain and has no Copyright and no rights reserved. Selections from The Little Prince by Lloyd Rodgers
Until next time, carpe diem!
All music is public domain. Little Prince by Lloyd Rogers. We Wish You a Merry Christmas by the U.S. Naval Academy. Ambient 03 by Sscheidl at Pixabay. A Journey Beyond by Christian Bodhi.

822 Listeners

24,437 Listeners

2,137 Listeners

259 Listeners