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Volcanologists

Peter Curran meets the scientists who are drawn to study volcanoes. What makes them risk life and limb, clambering around lakes of lava?

A lad's mag claimed that being a volcanologist was the second coolest job in the world after being an astronaut. This scientific tribe also loses one member each year, on average, in a fatal accident on a volcano. Peter Curran puts on his anthropological hard hat and asks what makes these researchers risk life and limb, clambering around active volcanoes? Are they driven by a desire to protect local people by understanding the timing of eruptions. Or are they drawn like moths to the sulphurous flames in a purely scientific quest.

Peter talks to volcanologists based at the University of Bristol, some of whom worked on Montserrat during the heights of the Caribbean island's volcanic crisis in 1997. He hears stories of crater-based craziness inside Mount Etna and a slide down a flow of volcanic glass.

Available now

15 minutes

Last on

Sun 4 Sep 2011 14:45

Broadcasts

  • Tue 30 Aug 2011 09:30
  • Sun 4 Sep 2011 14:45