11 episodes

OYLA Science Magazine is launching a podcast series! This new format will let you delve into the fascinating world of science like never before. In each episode, embark on a journey that breaks the boundaries of our printed pages as we unlock the mysteries of the universe one discovery at a time. Subscribe and get ready to be inspired, informed, and amazed by the incredible world of science.

OYLA Podcast OYLA Magazine

    • Kids & Family
    • 4.9 • 28 Ratings

OYLA Science Magazine is launching a podcast series! This new format will let you delve into the fascinating world of science like never before. In each episode, embark on a journey that breaks the boundaries of our printed pages as we unlock the mysteries of the universe one discovery at a time. Subscribe and get ready to be inspired, informed, and amazed by the incredible world of science.

    Hieroglyphs from the Sky

    Hieroglyphs from the Sky

    What are snowflakes? Is it true that no two are alike?
    On the 28th of January, 1887, the town of Fort Keogh in Montana was experiencing unusually heavy snowfall. A ranch owner named Matt Coleman became a witness to this unique natural phenomenon. Amidst the falling snowflakes, one attracted his attention above all the rest: it was nearly 16 inches wide and 8 inches thick! Even today, it still holds the status of the largest snowflake ever recorded. 
    Such large flakes appear during warm winter weather. It is much colder up in the atmosphere, where snowflakes form. As they fall, they melt a little and stick together. If you catch one on your mitten, you can see that it actually consists of several different flakes. And each one is unique. 
    But how do we know that? Has someone examined every snowflake in the world and proved once and for all that no two of them are alike? Of course not! But that doesn’t stop scientists from confidently stating there could never be two identical snowflakes. To understand why, we have to figure out what snowflakes are and how they appear. 
    Story told by Garrett Tucker.
    You can discover even more about science and the world around us in our magazine, so head over to oyla.us to check it out!

    • 10 min
    Why Every City Has Its Own Climate

    Why Every City Has Its Own Climate

    Living in a city is very different from living in a rural area. But did you know that even climate and weather can drastically change as you enter a big city? Temperature, wind, and humidity in an urban environment are not the same as outside of it. Why is that? 
    Story told by Garrett Tucker. 
    You can discover even more about science and the world around us in our magazine, so head over to oyla.us to check it out!

    • 9 min
    Mary Anning and a World Full of Monsters

    Mary Anning and a World Full of Monsters

    Toothy ichthyosaurs, giant plesiosaurs, flying pterosaurs... What beasts could possibly be more terrifying? For one woman who spent her life among these fossilized giants, the problems of poverty, gender inequality, and theft of her life’s work proved to be much more ugly monsters than these. 
    Story told by Garrett Tucker. 
    You can discover even more about science and the world around us in our magazine, so head over to oyla.us to check it out!

    • 9 min
    William of Occam and His Razor: The Ruthless Blade of Logic

    William of Occam and His Razor: The Ruthless Blade of Logic

    The surgeon holds a scalpel, the archaeologist wields a pickaxe, the physicist can expose you to an electric shock, and the chemist possesses an entire set of tools in their laboratory. What does the philosopher have left? A metaphorical razor! And actually, this weapon is far more dangerous than it seems at first.
    Story told by Garrett Tucker. 
    You can discover even more about science and the world around us in our magazine, so head over to oyla.us to check it out!

    • 8 min
    Stigler's Law: Call a Spade a Spade

    Stigler's Law: Call a Spade a Spade

    What unites Newton’s laws, the Penrose triangle, Gaussian elimination, the Pythagorean theorem, Halley’s Comet, and the Fermi paradox? It should be obvious: they’re all things named after their discoverers... or so  it seems.
    Story told by Garrett Tucker. 
    You can discover even more about science and the world around us in our magazine, so head over to oyla.us to check it out!

    • 8 min
    How to Invent a Language: The Story of Princess Caraboo

    How to Invent a Language: The Story of Princess Caraboo

    Have you heard of the young woman who managed to trick all of England? Two centuries ago, the daughter of a simple shoemaker became a sensation among local aristocrats and visiting travelers alike all thanks to her ingenuity, acting skills, and innate talent for linguistics.
    Story told by Garrett Tucker. 
    You can discover even more about science and the world around us in our magazine, so head over to oyla.us to check it out!

    • 12 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
28 Ratings

28 Ratings

Evagaline graxewood ,

Oyla podcast

I love oyla podcast the content is so perfect and engaging for students. Not only does it connect to science but it also discusses topics that humanity encounters in daily life. I hope you can do a podcast over AI explaining its basic fundamentals and possible theories.

Ivor Chernin ,

Good, but not enough of it.

It’s decent. My only problem with it is that they NEVER release new episodes. The last episode was in January, and it’s May right now.

lydey ,

One of my favourite scientists plz!

I’ve always been a fan of Marie Curie, can you PLEASE do a podcast episode about her?

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