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There are 1745 episodes in the Nature topic.

These are the latest episodes from the Nature topic added to soundcarrot, but be careful, many of these are serialised shows so jumping in at episode 10, for example, could confuse matters.

We'd recommend starting with the first episode of your show of choice, and if you like it, listening from there.

S3 E12: Steam-Blasting Beetles and other Animals with Chemical Superpowers
00:13:56 | Season: 3 | Episode: 12 | November 4th, 2020

In today’s Emma’s Chemistry Corner - brought to you with the help of our friends at BASF - Emma talks about biology, the connection between mosquitoes and elephants, and why we really need to know chemistry to truly understand the living world. She’ll also introduce some really cool animals that took chemistry to the next level!

Ep 10: The Dogs Who Saved A Town At The End Of The World
00:30:19 | Season: 1 | Episode: 10 | November 4th, 2020

Welcome to Bewilderbeasts! Today, we’re going to talk about Balto and Togo who saved a town from a diphtheria outbreak, a hero rat saving people from unexploded bombs, and some bizarre animal laws around the United States that are still – somehow – on the books. 

Tawny echoes in the cathedral of trees (sleep safe)
39:07 | Episode: 38 | October 31st, 2020

Night has fallen over the Forest of Dean. In the clearing where we left the microphones, the cool nocturnal air has begun to echo with the calls of tawny owls. Cars passing on the distant forest road hush like banks of wind through the high tree tops. Down on the forest floor, hidden beneath the twisted vines, a stream is revealed. Its watery eddies sparkle brightly through the darkness, reflected and amplified by the broad leaves above. When there’s no light in a forest everything sounds different. Sharper. What was close, is closer. Reverberant. What was far, is farther away. But between the echoes, there is silence. Between the tree trunks, branches crack, a creature squeals, a distant dog barks. Murmurs of murmurs seep through from the outside world. Falling softly on the gnarly bark of this ancient tree, in this giant forest where the owls live, these are the sounds of the night-time passing.

The Science of Candy Land
00:17:00 | October 30th, 2020

Happy Halloween! We’re headed to Candy Land, a sugary laboratory where mathematicians found a mysterious candy dagger appear – over and over again. So gather up your candy box, and let’s discover out why mathematicians are studying candy to understand the real-life landscapes around us. Mathematician Leif Ristroph shares how he stumbled into making sweet experiments. 

75: Coquerel's Sifaka w/ Keriann McGoogan!
00:38:31 | Episode: 75 | October 28th, 2020

Join Ellen and special guest, conservationist & primatologist Keriann McGoogan, for a review of Coquerel’s sifaka! In this episode, we chat about what makes sifakas so special as well as what it’s like to work with and study them in the wild in Madagascar.

Ep 9: Political Animals Special
00:22:19 | Season: 1 | Episode: 9 | October 28th, 2020

With 6 days before the 2020 national election in America, Melissa talks about animals in politics, including a berserker bunny who nearly sunk President Jimmy Carter's boat), why the two parties use a donkey and an elephant for representation, and animals who became town mayors in Vermont. 

Rain in Abney Park
34:44 | Episode: 37 | October 24th, 2020

Tucked behind buildings, encircled by busy roads in the borough of Hackney in London, there’s Abney Park. It’s one of the ‘Magnificent Seven’ cemeteries of London with marble-topped tombs half hidden by vines. It is a designated nature reserve protecting a rich ecological environment. Locals nip in, to take their dogs for a walk, to clear their heads and to get lost on its winding paths. It’s home too for a rich variety of birds, including green parrots. Planted as an exotic arboretum in 1840, there are around 200 trees, some still remain from that first planting. It’s a mild October day, and the rain is falling. Everything is being drenched. After a long time walking under dripping canopy we find a spot for the microphones. Set back from the path it’s a small leafy hollow, bisected by a diagonal spur growing out of an old oak. The rain is falling heavier now, sifting down in waves down through the branches, pattering onto millions of waxy leaves. These old trees are bathing in it. They’re pushing away the noise of the city, and sheltering the tranquillity of Abney Park under their boughs. 

74: Scalloped Hammerhead w/ Ryan Hegseth!
00:58:27 | Episode: 74 | October 22nd, 2020

Join Ellen and special guest, marine biologist Ryan Hegseth, for a review of the scalloped hammerhead! In this episode, we review what makes this hammerhead shark so successful and charming in addition to some slight detours along the way, visiting topics like octopus hickeys, learning to fight fear with education, and Shark Week.




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