PODCAST · science
Science That's Actually Interesting
by DocPJHarvey
Science does not have to be slow, dry or boring. Science That’s Actually Interesting explores science with curiosity, clarity and humour. Each episode takes a fun, light-hearted deep dive into topics from climate and environment to health, technology, space and human behaviour. Informative, entertaining and refreshingly human, this is science for curious listeners who love stories and want to stay curious about the world.
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13
Your Dog Is Older Than Civilization… And We Just Proved It
Dogs have been by our side for thousands of years, but new DNA evidence just rewrote that history.Scientists have discovered the oldest genetic proof of dogs, showing they were already living with humans across Europe and Asia more than 15,000 years ago.In this episode, we explore how wolves became companions, why early humans kept them, and how this unlikely partnership helped shape human history.Because your dog isn’t just a pet—it’s a living piece of the Ice Age.https://substack.com/@docpjharvey
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12
Your Brain on Psychedelics Isn’t What You Think
For decades, psychedelics were thought to throw the brain into chaos. But a massive new study analysing over 500 brain scans tells a very different story.In this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting, we explore what really happens in the brain on psychedelics like LSD, psilocybin, and DMT. Instead of breaking brain networks, these drugs may actually increase communication between them, reshaping how we think, feel, and perceive the world.This isn’t just about trippy experiences. It’s about consciousness, mental health, and a growing scientific shift from hype to clarity.https://docpjharvey.substack.comwww.docpjharvey.com
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11
Did Your DNA Already Decide How Long You'll Live?
How much control do we really have over how long we live? For decades scientists believed lifestyle was the biggest factor. But new research suggests something surprising. Once accidents and infectious diseases are removed from the data, genetics may explain nearly half of human lifespan. In this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting, we explore why scientists underestimated the power of genes, how twin studies revealed the hidden signal, and what centenarians might teach us about aging.Website: www.docpjharvey.comSubstack - https://substack.com/@docpjharvey
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10
The Koala Genetic Mystery: Why “Doomed” Populations Are Recovering
When a species crashes to near extinction, the genetic damage is supposed to be permanent. At least, that’s what scientists thought. But a new genetic study of koalas has revealed something unexpected. Populations that went through severe bottlenecks are showing signs of recovery. Even stranger, some populations with more genetic diversity appear to be at greater risk. In this episode we explore the surprising science of population bottlenecks, genetic reshuffling, and why evolution might be more resilient than we ever imagined.Website: www.docpjharvey.comSubstack - https://substack.com/@docpjharvey
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9
The Secret Life of Rivers
For centuries, rivers shaped human civilisation. They feed cities, grow food, and carve continents. But scientifically speaking… they were still a mystery.Until now.A new satellite mission has produced the first near-global picture of how rivers actually behave. And the results are surprising. Some of our best scientific models may be wrong about how water moves across the planet.In this episode, we explore the hidden dynamics of Earth’s rivers, the satellite that’s watching them from space, and why understanding them may be critical for the future of water, climate, and civilisation itself.Want more science? Check out my Substack - https://substack.com/@docpjharvey
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8
The Day Mosquitoes Discovered Humans
Why do mosquitoes bite humans? The answer may go back nearly two million years.New research reveals mosquitoes may have evolved a preference for human blood long before modern humans, possibly feeding on Homo erectus. In this episode, we explore mosquito evolution, ancient human history, and the genetics behind one of the world’s deadliest animals.Discover how mosquitoes shaped human survival, disease, and evolution in ways you’ve never considered.
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7
The 5,000 Year Old Bacteria That Outsmarted Modern Antibiotics
Five thousand years ago, a bacterium became trapped inside a block of ice deep inside a cave in Romania. It remained frozen there while human civilizations rose and fell.When scientists finally drilled into the ancient ice and revived the microbe, they made a startling discovery. The bacterium was resistant to modern antibiotics.Drugs that would not be invented for another five thousand years.In this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting, we explore what this strange discovery reveals about the hidden history of antibiotic resistance. You’ll hear how microbes have been fighting chemical battles for millions of years, why ancient bacteria may hold clues to the future of medicine, and how melting ice could release long-frozen genetic secrets back into the modern world.Sometimes the key to solving one of medicine’s biggest problems… is frozen in time.
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6
Elephant Whiskers: The Hidden Intelligence of Touch
Elephants are famous for their intelligence, memory and extraordinary trunks. But hidden along the length of that trunk are hundreds of tiny whiskers that play a crucial role in how elephants sense the world.In this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting, we explore the surprising science behind elephant whiskers. New research shows these whiskers are not just simple hairs. They are sophisticated tactile sensors with changing structure, stiffness and internal architecture from base to tip. Together, these features help elephants detect where contact occurs, amplify touch signals and safely explore their environment.Scientists used micro-CT imaging, electron microscopy and mechanical testing to reveal how these whiskers work. What they found is a remarkable example of biological design, where shape, porosity and stiffness combine to create a powerful touch-sensing system.Understanding elephant whiskers does more than explain animal behaviour. It could inspire the next generation of robotic sensors, prosthetics and soft robotics, showing how nature solves complex engineering problems using simple materials.If you enjoy learning about animal behaviour, biomechanics, evolutionary biology and surprising science discoveries, this episode reveals why one of the largest animals on Earth relies on tiny hairs to understand its world.Science That’s Actually Interesting is a science podcast that explores fascinating discoveries, curious research and the stories behind the science shaping our understanding of the world.Get in touch with Dr Paul - www.docpjharvey.com
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5
Schrödinger’s Cat Just Got Bigger - The Largest Quantum Superposition Ever
What if something the size of a virus could exist in two places at once?Physicists have just created the largest ever quantum superposition. A tiny metal particle made of thousands of atoms behaving like a wave instead of a solid object. In this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting, we explore how scientists pushed Schrödinger’s famous cat thought experiment closer to reality, why this matters for quantum mechanics, and what it means for the boundary between the quantum world and everyday life.Is there really a line where reality stops being weird? Or is the universe quantum all the way up?
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4
The Homogenocene: Why the World Is Starting to Look the Same
What if the biggest environmental crisis is not climate change, pollution, or deforestation? What if it is sameness? Across the planet, unique species are disappearing, replaced by a handful of adaptable survivors such as rats, pigeons, carp, and humans. Scientists call this the Homogenocene, the age where ecosystems are starting to look the same everywhere.In this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting, Paul takes you on a fast-paced, eye-opening journey through the modern extinction crisis. We explore how human activity has reshaped the planet since 1950. Wildlife populations have dropped 73 percent in just 50 years. Vertebrate extinction rates are 100 times higher than historical norms. Insects, vital for pollination and food webs, are vanishing at alarming rates.From the isolated islands where flightless birds went extinct to rivers and oceans being filled with the same species, the story of life on Earth has become a story of homogenization. Protected areas act as museums of the old world, but even these are shrinking and vulnerable. When keystone species like elephants or migratory animals like grizzly bears decline, the effects ripple across ecosystems far beyond what we might imagine.But it is not all doom and gloom. Some non-native species can enhance biodiversity, and nature is resilient if we give it the chance. Renewable energy, sustainable farming, smarter fisheries, and connected protected areas can help. In some cases, scientists are even relocating species as climate zones shift. One thing is clear. De-extinction is not the answer. You cannot bring back a species without the world it evolved in.This episode raises a deeper question. Do we want a planet that is messy, rich, and full of life or one that is simplified, familiar, and biologically uniform? The Homogenocene is not coming. It is already here. The future of life on Earth depends on the choices we make today.Fast, fascinating, and a little unsettling, this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting will change the way you see the world and the creatures that share it with us.
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3
The People Who Can’t Imagine: Inside Aphantasia
Close your eyes and picture a beach.Now imagine seeing nothing at all.Around four percent of people have aphantasia, the inability to form mental images. In this episode, we explore what it’s like to think without pictures, how scientists discovered this hidden variation in the human mind, and why brain scans show something surprising is still happening behind the scenes.Aphantasia challenges what we think imagination, memory and consciousness really are, and reveals just how different our inner worlds can be.It’s a reminder that there’s more than one way to think, and that science is far stranger, and more interesting, than we assume.
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2
Bigger Isn’t Always Better: What Your Member Really Says About You
Is bigger always better?Science says not quite.In this episode of Science That’s Actually Interesting, we unpack the real research behind male anatomy, attraction, intimidation, and evolution. Drawing on a large peer-reviewed study, we explore why certain traits evolve even when they are not especially useful, how humans make snap judgments based on visual cues, and why men often overestimate what others actually care about.This is not a joke episode or clickbait. It is a fascinating look at human psychology, sexual selection, and competition, and what they reveal about how we judge each other, often without realising it.Awkward? A little.Important? Definitely.And backed by real data.
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1
Trailer 1
Welcome to Science That’s Actually Interesting, the podcast that proves science does not have to be slow, dry, or boring. In this short trailer, get a taste of what the show is all about, fun, curiosity-driven deep dives into the science shaping our world.From climate and environment to space, technology, and human behaviour, each episode breaks down complex ideas through storytelling, surprising facts, and clear explanations. If you love asking questions, enjoy a good story, and want science that is informative, entertaining, and refreshingly human, this podcast is for you.Hit subscribe and stay curious.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Science does not have to be slow, dry or boring. Science That’s Actually Interesting explores science with curiosity, clarity and humour. Each episode takes a fun, light-hearted deep dive into topics from climate and environment to health, technology, space and human behaviour. Informative, entertaining and refreshingly human, this is science for curious listeners who love stories and want to stay curious about the world.
HOSTED BY
DocPJHarvey
CATEGORIES
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