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High Seas treaty talks and discoveries from the deep

We report on UN talks aimed at protecting the High Seas, new research on Covid-19 and the brain, and how the current conflict may impact international space partnerships.

The High Seas make up most of our oceans but belong to no-one and are largely unregulated, leaving them at risk of plunder. UN talks start afresh this week with the aim of protecting the marine biodiversity of these vast swathes of living ocean.

Covid-19 can shrink our brains and lead to cognitive decline, even in mild cases, according to a new study out this week. Professor Gwena毛lle Douaud, who led the research, explains how they used hundreds of brain scans to discover the effects of Covid infection.

A completely different discovery this week was made at the bottom of the sea; we hear how, after 107 years, scientists have finally found The Endurance, the lost shipwreck of Antarctic explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton.

How might the Russian invasion of Ukraine affect international space exploration? After a Twitter spat between a former NASA astronaut and the Russian space chief, we鈥檙e joined by 大象传媒 science correspondent Jonathan Amos and 大象传媒 Russian鈥檚 Nikolay Voronin to discuss how science in Russia and the rest of the world may be impacted by the current conflict.

And finally, the stunning discovery of a 330 million-year-old vampyropod fossil, the earliest known relative of modern-day octopuses and vampire squids, gives us an opportunity to imagine the world it inhabited, a third of a billion years ago.

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29 minutes

Broadcasts

  • Thu 10 Mar 2022 16:30
  • Thu 10 Mar 2022 21:00

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大象传媒 Inside Science is produced in partnership with The Open University.

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