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Nature Podcast - Podcast Stream


Description: Nature is a weekly international journal publishing the finest peer-reviewed research in all fields of science. The Nature Podcast is a free weekly audio show highlighting content from each issue, and interviews with the scientists creating the data.

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Nature Podcast - streams of individual podcasts

2 September 2010 2 September: This week, ancient cratons, climate change in China and guilt-free seafood. Plus, the best of the rest from Nature.

Nature Extra: William James This week marks the 100th anniversary of the death of William James, the pioneering American philosopher and founding father of psychology. Join Kerri Smith as she talks to his biographer Linda Simon about James' life and work.

Nature: 26 August 2010 26 August: Dogs as a pet project for geneticists, kin selection theory takes a knock, and hurricane Katrina five years on. Plus, the best of the rest from Nature.

Nature: 19 August 2010 19 August: Anxious monkeys, evidence of some very old butchery and just how much should we be regulating genetic testing? Plus, the best of the rest from Nature.

Nature: 29 July 2010 29 July: This week, how seismologists explain mid-plate earthquakes, 400 years of planetary science, a taster of the food and agriculture special, and the best of the rest in Nature.

Nature: 22 July 2010 22 July: How climate change is making marmots fatter and fitter, imagining a world without mosquitoes, and the link between obesity and diabetes.

Nature: 15 July 2010 15 July: A treasure map for diamonds, crime and punishment, and the community of viruses found in poo. Plus, our weekly news round up.

Nature: 8 July 2010 8 July: How human activity is increasing dust emissions, curbing cocaine addiction, early human settlers in Europe, and just how small is a proton? Plus, the best of the rest in Nature.

Nature: 1 July 2010 1 July: Face to face with a true leviathan, the earliest multicellular lifeforms, the benefits of going organic and blowing atoms apart from the inside with a giant x-ray laser.

Nature: 24 June 2010 24 June: The basis of a strange condition called blindsight, a function for pseudogenes, and storing quantum information encoded in light. Plus, the Nature Podcast Salary Survey Game Show.

Nature Extra: Rebecca Skloot In 1951, a young woman named Henrietta Lacks died of cancer. Cells from her cancer were the first human cells to be grown in a lab, and became one of the most important tools in biology. But Henrietta knew none of this. Science writer Rebecca Skloot tells Henrietta's story in a new book, and she spoke to Nature's Kerri Smith.

Nature: 17 June 2010 17 June: The boundaries of humanity, tracking objects in the furthest reaches of the solar system, and an immortal contributor to science. Plus, what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

Nature: 10 June 2010 10 June: Jewish genomics, super speedy lasers, and climate change disbelievers. Plus, what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

Nature: 3 June 2010 3 June: Mentoring by numbers, quantum physics gets frustrated, a new twist on the Big Bang theory and the best of the rest in Nature.

Nature: 27 May 2010 27 May: A new species of island-dwelling dinosaur, canyons on Mars, busting blood clots and deception hunting at the airport.

Nature: 20 May 2010 20 May: A new way to mass produce semiconductors, putting brain scanning on firm ground, and the effect of global warming on malaria.

Nature: 13 May 2010 13 May: Studying natural selection in Caribbean lizards, testing the theory of common ancestry, a nanoscale factory strikes gold, and what made Dorothy Hodgkin such a great scientist.

Nature: 6 May 2010 6 May: How scientists have cracked the splicing code, a muscle-mimicking material, a look back at the biggest earthquake ever recorded, and the best of the rest in Nature.

Nature: 29 April 2010 29 April: How the similarities of identical twins go beyond their appearance, new dinosaur fossils shed light on the evolution of feathers, an asteroid study reveals some frosty findings, and a round-up of what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

Nature: 22 April 2010 22 April: Brain training put to the test, how the Red Sea could help refill the Dead Sea, a look into an exoplanet's atmosphere reveals unexpected results, and how loopholes in the Copenhagen Accord could mean we overshoot our targets on global warming.

Nature: 15 April 2010 15 April: The 'missing' genes behind complex traits, why some cancer cells spread around the body, network theory explains a catastrophic power failure in Italy, and what's hot elsewhere in Nature.

Nature: 8 April 2010 8 April: GPS-enabled pigeons show how birds of a feather flock together, how gut bacteria vary with diet, and the effects of livestock on the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide.

Nature: 1 April 2010 1 April: A new answer to an old paradox about the young Earth, over 20,000 human genes caught on camera, and a conference on agricultural research for development.

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