95 episodes

A podcast on science, nature and history. From the Big Bang to today, a 360 degree look at life, the universe and the history of everything - covering the moon landings, to the history of the Indus Valley Civilization.

360 On History Saima Baig

    • Science

A podcast on science, nature and history. From the Big Bang to today, a 360 degree look at life, the universe and the history of everything - covering the moon landings, to the history of the Indus Valley Civilization.

    Podcast Episode 94 l Noor Inayat Khan

    Podcast Episode 94 l Noor Inayat Khan

    This episode is on Noor Inayat Khan, an SOE agent with codename Madeleine sent to France in 1943 as a wireless operator to help the French resistance during World War II. Her job was to support the French resistance network known as Prosper.

    Please subscribe to the You Tube Channel for more on science, history and nature and please do check out the website and follow on social media: Twitter // Instagram // Facebook // Reddit // Threads. Music: Moonrise by Chad Crouch – Instrumental from Free Music Archive.

    Podcast Episode 93 l A 3D Map of the Human Brain

    Podcast Episode 93 l A 3D Map of the Human Brain

    Today, we have an absolutely mind-blowing story about an unprecedented feat of brain mapping accomplished by researchers at Harvard and Google. It's a tale of big data, artificial intelligence, and peering deeper into the brain's wiring than ever before.



    The story begins about a decade ago, when the lab of Dr. Jeff Lichtman, a Harvard professor of molecular and cellular biology, received a tiny sample of human brain tissue - just 1 cubic millimeter in size. But packed into that rice grain-sized piece of temporal cortex from an epilepsy patient was an astronomical amount of data - 57,000 cells, 230 millimeters of blood vessels, and get this...150 million synapses, amounting to a staggering 1,400 terabytes of information.



    For years, Lichtman's team painstakingly imaged the sample using specialized electron microscopy techniques. They then collaborated with AI experts at Google Research to analyze this wealth of data using cutting-edge algorithms. And just recently, they achieved the unthinkable - a comprehensive 3D reconstruction they've dubbed "H01", rendering in vivid detail nearly every cell and neural connection within that minuscule brain fragment. What H01 revealed was astonishing.



    For one, non-neuronal glial cells like astrocytes and oligodendrocytes outnumbered neurons by a ratio of 2 to 1, highlighting these long-overlooked supporting actors' critical importance in brain function.The most common cell type was the oligodendrocyte, whose role is to coat neuronal axons with insulating myelin. And while most neurons formed a multitude of weaker synaptic connections, the team discovered rare "supercharged" pathways where axons formed up to an incredible 50 synapses with another cell.



    Even stranger, a few axons took on bizarre, swirling patterns of unknown significance. Since the sample came from an epilepsy patient, it's unclear if these odd shapes are linked to the condition or just rare quirks of wiring.



    But the implications of H01 are monumental. This tour-de-force collaboration between Harvard and Google has pioneered new frontiers in "connectomics" - comprehensively mapping the brain's neural circuits, just as genomics catalogs our genes.



    The feat, published in Science, is the latest in a nearly 10-year collaboration with scientists at Google Research, who combine Lichtman’s electron microscopy imaging with AI algorithms to color-code and reconstruct the extremely complex wiring of mammal brains. The paper’s three co-first authors are former Harvard postdoctoral researcher Alexander Shapson-Coe; Michał Januszewski of Google Research, and Harvard postdoctoral researcher Daniel Berger.



    Dr. Lichtman explains the significance saying: "There is this level of understanding about brains that presently doesn't exist. We know about the outward manifestations of behavior. We know about some of the molecules that are perturbed. But in between the wiring diagrams, until now, there was no way to see them. Now, there is a way."



    The team's ultimate goal, funded by the National Institutes of Health BRAIN Initiative, is to scale up and map an entire mouse brain - a mind-boggling 1,000 times more data than the 1 cubic millimeter H01 sample. Next, they'll tackle the mouse hippocampus, that crucial region for memory and neurological disease.



    With tools like these, Lichtman envisions mapping animal models of autism, Alzheimer's and more - at last shedding light on the brain's wiring underlying cognitive function and dysfunction.The H01 data, published in the journal Science, has been made freely available on a dedicated website, allowing scientists worldwide to pore over and annotate this first ultra high-resolution glimpse into the brain's breathtakingly complex architecture.



    Google Research collaborator Viren Jain emphasizes the importance of open science:

    Podcast Episode 92 l The Story of the Dabbous Giraffes

    Podcast Episode 92 l The Story of the Dabbous Giraffes

    Deep in the heart of the Sahara Desert, amidst the scorching sands and towering dunes, lies a remarkable archaeological treasure - the Dabous Giraffes. They can be found on a sandstone outcrop in the Ténéré desert in the first foothills of the Aïr Mountains in North Central Niger. We tell their story in this episode of the 360 on History Podcast.

    Please subscribe to the You Tube Channel for more on science, history and nature and please do check out the website and follow on social media: Twitter // Instagram // Facebook // Reddit // Threads. Music: Moonrise by Chad Crouch – Instrumental from Free Music Archive.

    Podcast Episode 91 l Did this clay tablet describe an ancient asteroid impact?

    Podcast Episode 91 l Did this clay tablet describe an ancient asteroid impact?

    This is the story of a star map, one which depicted an ancient asteroid having impacted Earth. We pick up the story from 150 years ago, when an ancient Sumerian star map was found by Sir Austen Henry Layard, a Victorian archaeologist, in a subterranean library in the by then destroyed Royal Palace at Nineveh - the ancient Royal Library of Ashurbanipal, named after the last great king of the Neo-Assyrian Empire who ruled from 669 BC to his death in 631 BC. This library housed a collection of more than 30,000 clay tablets and fragments containing a panoply of texts in various languages from the 7th century BCE, including the famous Epic of Gilgamesh inscribed on a clay tablet in cuneiform script (one of the oldest forms of writing known, meaning "wedge-shaped," because people wrote it using a reed stylus cut to make a wedge-shaped mark on a clay tablet). The library also housed a circular clay tablet, which was made by an Assyrian scribe around 700 BC, depicting an ancient asteroid having impacted Earth. Analysis conducted 150 years later revealed that it reflected the sky above Mesopotamia over 5000 years ago.



















    Please subscribe to the You Tube Channel for more on science, history and nature and please do check out the website and follow on social media: Twitter // Instagram // Facebook // Reddit // Threads. Music: Moonrise by Chad Crouch – Instrumental from Free Music Archive.

    • 9 min
    Podcast Episode 90 l Our two cousins: A neanderthal and an orangutan

    Podcast Episode 90 l Our two cousins: A neanderthal and an orangutan

    We are discussing two different amazing news items in today's podcast.



    First we have the reconstruction of the face of a 75,000-year-old female Neanderthal, whose flattened skull was found amidst hundreds of fragmented bone pieces at Shanidar Cave in Iraqi Kurdistan. The discovery of this Neanderthal skull took place during an extensive excavation in this remote region of Iraqi Kurdistan in 1960, led by a team of experienced archaeologists and conservators from the University of Cambridge. The skull was found among a vast array of fragmented bone pieces. It had been severely damaged, likely due to a rockslide or collapse, relatively shortly after the individual's death. This occurred after the brain had decomposed but before the cranium had filled with sediment. Over the course of tens of thousands of years, the weight of the accumulated sediment compacted the skull even further. By the time archaeologists discovered the remains, the skull had been flattened to a thickness of approximately two centimeters.

    Neanderthals are thought to have died out around 40,000 years ago, so this remarkable feat not only provides a visual representation of a long-extinct hominid species but also offers valuable insights into their evolutionary adaptations and social behaviors. By studying the facial features and cranial structure of the Iraqi Kurdistan Neanderthal, researchers can better understand the dietary habits, environmental adaptations, and even potential cognitive abilities of this ancient population.

    The reconstruction is being showcased in a new movie on Netflix. You can see the reconstructed face on our website 360onhistory.com

    Next we move on to our other evolutionary cousin, the orangutan! In June 2022, a team of researchers observed a behavior never before witnessed in the animal world. A Sumatran orangutan named Rakus self-treated an injury using a medicinal plant in Sumatra, Indonesia. He was seen with a wound just under his eye and then a few days later was observed picking and chewing the stems and leaves of Akar Kuning (Fibraurea tinctoria), or yellow root. He ate this plant, which is NOT part of its regular diet and was also observed chewing it up and then putting it on his face as a poultice. A few weeks later his wound had healed. An analysis of the orangutan’s behavior was published in the journal Scientific Reports.



    Past research has shown Bornean orangutans self-medicating by rubbing their limbs with chewed plants, perhaps to alleviate sore muscles. And chimpanzees have been known to spread chewed insects over their wounds. You can check out images of the orangutan with the wound and then one a few weeks later with the healed scar on our website.



    This has provided amazing insights into the behaviour of orangutans and no doubt more observations will be conducted to increase our knowledge.



    These two stories have been truly amazing and have given us so much more understanding of Neanderthals and organgutans.

    Please subscribe to the You Tube Channel for more on science, history and nature and please do check out the website and follow on social media: Twitter // Instagram // Facebook // Reddit // Threads. Music: Moonrise by Chad Crouch – Instrumental from Free Music Archive.

     



     

    • 6 min
    Podcast Episode 89 l Driving on the Left or Right

    Podcast Episode 89 l Driving on the Left or Right

    The Curious Case of Driving on the Right vs. the Left. How did this custom begin and why do some countries adopt one or the other? We discuss it all in this episode and talk about the history of this custom. Of course, it is true that the UK drives on the CORRECT side of the road.

    Please subscribe to the You Tube Channel for more on science, history and nature and please do check out the website and follow on social media: Twitter // Instagram // Facebook // Reddit // Threads. Music: Moonrise by Chad Crouch – Instrumental from Free Music Archive.

    • 8 min

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