Marnie Chesterton
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Oh, that's lovely that you get to memorialise a friend in a dung beetle.
Gimo, thank you so much for coming on to Unexpected Elements.
Dr. Gimo Daniel, it's been a real pleasure talking dung beetles and sky islands with you.
Thank you very much.
So for this week's theme of Africa Day, we've discovered that this huge continent is breaking apart faster than we'd imagined.
We've also unpicked the complex issues of language in science and we've just found out about the sky island of Mount Mabu in Mozambique.
Still to come on the show, we'll be joining the dots from the evolution of flight to Ebola, asking if the Bermuda Triangle exists, plus the role of AI in African data centres.
This is Unexpected Elements from the BBC World Service.
And this week we're using Africa Day as our starting point to seek out some science.
And by we, I mean me, Marnie Chasterton in London in the UK.
And I'm joined by...
Tristan Atone in Helsinki, Finland.
And... Phyllis Mote in Nairobi, Kenya.
So each week, one of our panellists brings us a story that might have otherwise gone under the radar of global news.
And I give them bonus points if it ties into the week's theme, which this week is a celebration of an entire continent, Africa Day.
So plenty of chances to make a connection.
So who's up for this?
It's me, and I can definitely claim those points, but you're going to have to sort of follow the train of thought because the story I have this week begins in Norway.
Which is not in Africa.