Wild Origins

The Turing App

Welcome to Wild Origins - a podcast about how life got weird, and how that weirdness made the world we live in. Each episode follows a discovery in nature. We’ll trace the dawn of humankind, the rise and fall of dinosaurs, the secret lives of birds, and the strange rules that shape plants and animals today. We’ll visit ship graveyards, ancient caves, and ecosystems under pressure, meeting creatures that shouldn’t exist but do.

  1. 1 day ago

    Could Ancient Diamond Spewing Volcanoes Return

    Volcanoes are Earth’s primal architects, but while most are defined by the slow movement of lava, a hidden class of eruptions once detonated with "supersonic force". These are kimberlite eruptions, long-extinct volcanic events that did not ooze molten rock or form towering cones like Mount St. Helens. Instead, they functioned as nature’s treasure chests, originating 150 to 300 kilometers below the surface in ancient, stable continental hearts called cratons. Driven by the violent expansion of carbon dioxide and water, these eruptions catapulted diamonds to the surface at speeds exceeding 100 kilometers per hour, encased in a protective shell of molten rock that insulated them from intense heat and pressure changes. While these "diamond elevators" were most active between 1.2 billion and 50 million years ago during the breakup of supercontinents, they may not be as extinct as once believed. The recent discovery of a kimberlite eruption in Tanzania just 10,000 years old has shattered the assumption that these giants have been silent for millions of years. Modern seismic data from Canada, Russia, and Africa reveals unusual disturbances deep beneath ancient cratons, hinting that the volatile conditions necessary for these explosive events still exist today. This suggests that the Earth may still be capable of unleashing these violent forces, potentially bringing new treasures—and cataclysmic destruction—to the surface.

    30 min

About

Welcome to Wild Origins - a podcast about how life got weird, and how that weirdness made the world we live in. Each episode follows a discovery in nature. We’ll trace the dawn of humankind, the rise and fall of dinosaurs, the secret lives of birds, and the strange rules that shape plants and animals today. We’ll visit ship graveyards, ancient caves, and ecosystems under pressure, meeting creatures that shouldn’t exist but do.