Main content

A Billion Years of Slime

The story of the billion years when slime reigned supreme on Earth and how we might enter a new era of slime as our climate changes.

Slime is an ambiguous thing. It exists somewhere between a solid and a liquid. It inspires revulsion even while it compels our fascination in fiction and on the screen. It is both a vehicle for pathogens and the strongest weapon in our immune system. Many of us know little about it, yet it is the substance on which our world turns.

Sirine Saba reads from Susanne Wedlich鈥檚 ground-breaking new book which leads us on a journey through the 3-billion-year history of slime. There is probably no single living creature that does not depend on slime in some way. Most organisms use slime for a number of functions: as a structural material, as jellyfish do; for propagation, as plants do; to catch prey, as frogs do; for defence, like the hagfish; or for movement, like snails.

In this final episode, the story of how slime dominated the Earth for a billion years and the crucial role it played in the evolution of life. And, with climate change, some scientists think slime could re-emerge to dominate the planet for another billion years.

Written by Susanne Wedlich and translated by Ay莽a T眉rko臒lu
Abridged and produced by Jane Greenwood
A Loftus Media production for 大象传媒 Radio 4

Available now

14 minutes

Last on

Sat 30 Oct 2021 00:30

More episodes

Previous

Next

You are at the last episode

See all episodes from Slime: A Natural History by Susanne Wedlich

Broadcasts

  • Fri 29 Oct 2021 09:45
  • Sat 30 Oct 2021 00:30