The Arctic is warming two to three times faster than any other place on Earth.
Kevin Xu Photography via Shutterstock
Plus, new discoveries about early humans in Tanzania’s Olduvai Gorge. Listen to episode 5 of The Conversation Weekly podcast.
Thousands of people protested in Hong Kong in July 2019 against a proposed extradition law.
omonphotography via Shutterstock
A transcript of episode 4 of The Conversation Weekly podcast. Including a story on how scientists are speeding up the hunt for dark matter.
The name “clubhouse” conveys a sense of exclusivity, belonging and connection.
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Social media platform Clubhouse is a buzzy Silicon Valley darling, but its core attribute – audio chat – is unlikely to be a flash in the pan.
A man is arrested during a protest against Hong Kong’s National Security Law in July 2020.
Miguel Candela/EPA
Plus new research finds a way to speed up the search for dark matter. Listen to episode 4 of The Conversation Weekly.
The race to make enough coronavirus vaccines is underway.
i_am_zews via Shutterstock
A transcript of The Conversation Weekly podcast episode #3.
Access to coronavirus vaccine depends on where in the world you live.
Alamy Stock Photo
Plus new research on why China is closing down coal-fired power stations. Listen to episode 3 of The Conversation Weekly.
© Private collection of Jessica Borge, 2018.,
The audio version of a long read on the forgotten history of the man who invented Durex condoms.
Protests have rocked Yangon in Myanmar in the wake of a military coup on February 1.
Nyein Chan Naing/EPA
Plus we talk to an American virologist testing wild animals for COVID-19. Listen to episode 2 of The Conversation Weekly podcast.
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You can now press play on some Conversation articles.
An artist’s illustration of the aeroshell containing NASA’s Perseverance rover guiding itself towards the surface of Mars.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Plus what protesters in Belarus want to happen next. Episode 1 of The Conversation’s new weekly podcast.
🎧 Listen to the trailer for The Conversation Weekly, a new podcast.
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There are lots of different ways to listen to The Conversation’s podcasts.
Hospitals have been squeezed and lack adequate government support.
Peter Byrne/PA Wire
🎧 PODCAST: An audio version of an in depth article by two doctors on what it’s like fighting COVID-19 the second time around.
Ioat/Shutterstock
Sound and its subtle, malleable possibilities for interpretation can be a valuable tool for those trying to capture pasts that have been erased, marginalised or forgotten.
Markets panicked following the collapse of investment bank, Lehman Brothers, in 2008.
Shutterstock.com
PODCAST: Part six of The Anthill Podcast’s Recovery series looks at the 2008 financial crisis and Great Recession that followed.
Not a smooth transition: Boris Yeltsin talks to people in Moscow in 1992.
Dima Tanin/EPA
The fifth episode of a series from The Anthill Podcast on how recoveries from major crises throughout history focuses on what happened after the fall of the Soviet Union.
PA archive
PODCAST: The fourth part of a series from The Anthill Podcast on how the world has recovered from past crises examines the aftermath of the second world war in the UK.
US soldiers with influenza at Aix-Les-Bains in France in 1918.
U.S. Army photographer via Wikimedia Commons
PODCAST: The third part of a series from The Anthill Podcast on how the world recovered from major crises throughout history focuses on the recovery after 1918.
Copperplate engraving of the Lisbon earthquake, 1755. Original in Museu da Cidade, Lisbon.
Wikimedia Commons
PODCAST: The second part of a series from The Anthill Podcast on how the world recovered from major crises throughout history.
Charles Dickens in his study at Gad’s Hill Place in Kent, where he died in 1870.
Charles Dickens Museum
PODCAST: An audio version of an in depth article on what newly discovered documents reveal about the burial of Charles Dickens, 150 years after his death.