Podcasts about geological time

  • 20PODCASTS
  • 24EPISODES
  • 25mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Feb 16, 2024LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about geological time

Latest podcast episodes about geological time

Burns Banter - A fresh look at Robert Burns
Burns Banter - Ep.18 Robert Burns 'My love is like a red red rose'

Burns Banter - A fresh look at Robert Burns

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2024 9:31


My love is like a red red rose is a beautiful love song written by Robert Burns around 1792. Robert said that it was an old Scots song that he had collected in the country. I believe it may well have been old, but Robert must have rewritten it. I believe this as it has very modern language which includes the concept of geological time, which was practically unheard of at the time.  This may have come from Roberts friendship with James Hutton, who was a pioneer in this field. It was first published in 1794 by Pietro Urbani in his work, Scots Songs, although it had a different tune to the one we know today. Pietro was a singer composer from Milan that Robert met in 1793. The song we sing today, with the tune we know today,  (called low down in the broom), was first put together by a Paisley composer / editor called Robert Archibald Smith in 1821. The publication was called 'Scottish Minstrel'.My love is like a red red rose is a beautiful song, check out some versions of it on youtube. It's well worth it.

The Green Tunnel
Geological Time

The Green Tunnel

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2023 24:54


This season the history we're starting with is really, really old. We are exploring the geological history of the rocks and mountains the Appalachian Trail runs through. We will also answer the age-old question, are the mountains actually getting taller?

Biologia In Situ
093 - Introdução à Paleobiologia

Biologia In Situ

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2023 57:10


Olá, bio-ouvinte! No novo episódio do nosso podcast, vamos dar início à minissérie sobre Paleobiologia! Vamos começar viajando pelo tempo geológico com as mudanças que ocorreram no planeta e como se formaram os fósseis.    CONTATOS cartinhas@biologiainsitu.com.br Instagram, Facebook e LinkedIn: @biologiainsitu Twitter e TikTok: @bioinsitu APOIO Apoie pela Orelo em "Fazer parte"! Pix: cartinhas@biologiainsitu.com.br CRÉDITOS Coordenação: Bruna Canellas, Cristianne Santos, Heloá Caramuru, Ricardo Gomes e Vitor Lopes. Pesquisa de pauta: Vanusa Gatteli e Viviane Turman. Revisão científica: Isabela Mayara e Nadja Lopes. Roteirização: Ana Victória. Revisão textual: Sueli Rodrigues. Locução: Renata Santos e Ricardo Gomes. Direção: Vitor Lopes. Edição e mixagem de áudio: Ricardo Gomes. Arte de capa: Larissa Castro.   REFERÊNCIAS ALLISON, Peter A.; BOTTJER, David J. (ed.). Taphonomy: process and bias through time. Londres: Springer, 2011. 603 p. Disponível em: https://cloudflare-ipfs.com/ipfs/bafykbzacebhklfn4x73alfj4wd2ef7ctoe4idkqdpxn6ef6qzgksrb7bgi5la?filename=%28Aims%20%26%20Scope%20Topics%20in%20Geobiology%20Book%20Series%2032%29%20Peter%20A.%20Allison%2C%20David%20J.%20Bottjer%20%28auth.%29%2C%20Peter%20A.%20Allison%2C%20David%20J.%20Bottjer%20%28eds.%29%20-%20Taphonomy_%20Process%20and%20Bias%20Through%20Time-Springer%20Netherlands.pdf. Acesso em: 15 mar. 2023 ANELLI, L.E.; LEME, J.M.; OLIVEIRA, P.E.; FAIRCHILD, T,R. 2020. Paleontologia. Guia de aulas práticas, uma introdução ao estudo dos fósseis. Universidade de São Paulo, Instituto de Geociências. Disponível em: https://didatico.igc.usp.br/fosseis/processos-de-fossilizacao. Acesso em: 12 mar. 2023. A História do planeta contada pelas rochas. Disponível em: https://revistapesquisa.fapesp.br/a-historia-do-planeta-contada-pelas-rochas/. Acesso em: 3 mar. 2023.  A primeira fratura. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 13 mar. 2023.  Biostratigraphy | Palaeontology and life history. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 3 mar. 2023.  BUCK, P. V. et al. A new tetrapod ichnotaxon from Botucatu Formation, Lower Cretaceous (Neocomian), Brazil, with comments on fossil track preservation on inclined planes and local paleoecology. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, v. 466, p. 21–37, 15 jan. 2017.  BUSS, L. W.; SEILACHER, A. The Phylum Vendobionta: a sister group of the Eumetazoa? Paleobiology, v. 20, n. 1, p. 1–4, ed 1994. Dinossauros - Materiais Didáticos. , 10 ago. 2020. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 10 mar. 2023 CASATI, Rafael. Tafonomia: o estudo de como se formam os fósseis. O estudo de como se formam os fósseis. 2023. Instituto de Geociências da Universidade de São Paulo. Disponível em: https://didatico.igc.usp.br/tafonomia-o-estudo-fosseis/. Acesso em: 11 mar. 2023. CASTRO, Ana Flávia. Chapada do Araripe: conheça a riqueza cultural e histórica do cariri. Metrópoles. Brasília, 30 abr. 2021. p. 1-9. Disponível em: https://www.metropoles.com/vida-e-estilo/turismo/chapada-do-araripe-conheca-a-riqueza-cultural-e-historica-do-cariri?amp. Acesso em: 11 mar. 2023. CUNHA, Lucca; FRANCISCHINI, Heitor. Museu de Paleontologia Irajá Damiani Pinto: fósseis. 2023. UFRGS. Disponível em: https://www.ufrgs.br/museupaleonto/?page_id=735. Acesso em: 15 mar. 2023. FÓSSIL. In: Dicionário Priberam da Língua Portuguesa, 2023. Disponível em https://dicionario.priberam.org/Fóssil. Acesso em 14 de março de 2023. GRADSTEIN, F. M. et al. Geologic Time Scale 2020. [s.l.] Elsevier, 2020. Há 200 milhões de anos, mudanças climáticas foram essenciais para dinossauros espalharem-se pelo planeta. Jornal da USP, 11 jan. 2023. Disponível em:  . Acesso em: 10  mar. 2023 HOLZ, Michael; SIMÕES, Marcello G.. Elementos Fundamentais de Tafonomia. Porto Alegre: Ufrgs, 2002. 231 p. Disponível em: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marcello-Simoes/publication/309122335_Elementos_Fundamentais_de_Tafonomia/links/57ffd98c08aec3e477eac69d/Elementos-Fundamentais-de-Tafonomia.pdf. Acesso em: 11 mar. 2023. INSTITUTO VIRTUAL DE PALEONTOLOGIA DO ESTADO DO RIO DE JANEIRO (IVP-RJ) (Rio de Janeiro). Parque Paleontológico de São José de Itaboraí. 2023. Disponível em: http://www.ivprj.uerj.br/parquepaleontologicoitabora.html. Acesso em: 12 mar. 2023. International Commission on Stratigraphy. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 10 mar. 2023.  Jornal da USP ano XXI n.751. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 10 mar. 2023.  KELLER, Thiago. ‘Mundo Perdido': conheça 5 espécies de dinossauros encontradas no Brasil. 2022. Disponível em: https://ndmais.com.br/meio-ambiente/mundo-perdido-conheca-5-especies-de-dinossauros-encontradas-no-brasil/. Acesso em: 12 mar. 2023. KERBER, B. B. et al. O registro fossilífero de metazoários ediacaranos na América do Sul e suas implicações nos estudos sobre origem e complexificação da vida animal. Geologia USP. Série Científica, v. 13, n. 3, p. 51–64, 1 set. 2013. LEVIN, Harold L.. Time and Geology. In: LEVIN, Harold L.. The Earth Through Time. Philadelphia: W. B. Saunders Company, 1978. Cap. 5. p. 123-147. Disponível em: https://openlibrary.org/works/OL1801376W/The_earth_through_time?edition=key%3A/books/OL4564379M. Acesso em: 18 fev. 2023. MARSOLA, J. No labirinto dos arcossauros. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 13 mar. 2023. O lugar dos insetos na biodiversidade. Jornal da USP, 16 fev. 2023. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 12 mar. 2023 O'NEIL, J. et al. Neodymium-142 Evidence for Hadean Mafic Crust. Science, v. 321, n. 5897, p. 1828–1831, 26 set. 2008.  Pedaço de um supercontinente. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 13 mar. 2023.  PEDROSA, M. S. [UNESP. Mudanças ambientais e extinções durante o Eon Fanerozoico. Alma, p. 175 f., 13 dez. 2018. Pré-Cambriano - Materiais Didáticos. , 6 ago. 2020. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 2 mar. 2023. TAFONOMIA. In: Dicionário Priberam da Língua Portuguesa, 2023. Disponível em https://dicionario.priberam.org/tafonomia. Acesso em 14 de março de 2023. Tempo Geológico – Museu de Paleontologia Irajá Damiani Pinto. , [s.d.]. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 3 mar. 2023. Uma breve história da escrita. [s.d.]. Disponível em: . Acesso em: 3 mar. 2023. What Was the Biggest Dinosaur? What Was the Smallest? Disponível em: . Acesso em: 13 mar. 2023. WILLIAMS, F.M. (2016). Geological Time. In: Understanding Ethiopia. GeoGuide. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-02180-5_2 YORK, D.; FARQUHAR, R. M. Earth's Age and Geochronology. Oxford, New York: Pergamon Pr, 1972.  

Science Knights in the Morning
Missing Geological Time

Science Knights in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2023 51:34


Are you curious about the science of geological time and why certain events disappear from the record? Join host Conley Rasor and experts Geologist Dr. Thomas Shiller and Astronomer Dr. Anirban Bhattacharjee as they dive into the subject in this live episode of Science Knights in the Morning. Geological time refers to the vast spans of time recorded in Earth's rock layers and fossils, often measured in millions and billions of years. But, as the Science Knights will explain, there are gaps in the geological record where events and organisms are missing. Tune in to understand how this happens and what it reveals about our planet's history. Don't miss this live episode of Science Knights in the Morning, where we discuss the science of geological time and missing pieces of the record.

One Week A Thing
2 - The History of Geological Time

One Week A Thing

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2022 73:38


SRT and SRG have the biggest surprise for you. Bigger than a puppy on Christmas. Bigger than a mouse in your shoe. Bigger than Mariah Carey coming to your neighbours engagement party. Listen, and I mean listen for this HOT HOT HOT content. We also talk about how The Big Bang is G.O.A.T., What you would do if you found out you were The Patriarchy embodied, and SRT reveals herself to be a Tube Earther. Oh.. and also we touch on every Eon of Geological History that has ever existed…..And yah we know this is a bit like Atlantis but don't lose your shorts. We will talk about Selling Sunset soon.

Geology Bites By Oliver Strimpel
Carmie Garzione on Reconstructing Land Elevation Over Geological Time

Geology Bites By Oliver Strimpel

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2022 31:17 Very Popular


Throughout geological history, various points on the Earth's surface have been lifted up to great elevations and worn down into low, flat-lying regions. Determining surface elevation histories is difficult because rocks that were once on the surface are usually eroded away or buried. Furthermore, most rock-forming processes are not directly affected by elevation. But it turns out that we can overcome these challenges, as Carmie Garzione explains in the podcast. Carmie Garzione is Dean of the College of Science at the University of Arizona. She has managed to pin down the history of elevation changes by analyzing stable isotopes of carbon and oxygen in carbonate rocks. She describes how the method works, and presents her findings for the Tibetan plateau and the Andes. They show pulses of very rapid (geologically speaking) uplift. What might this be telling us about what has been going on in the lower crust and upper mantle in these regions?

Docs Ireland Podcast
Material Legacies - Q&A with AEMI curators Alice Butler & Daniel Fitzpatrick and artist Grace Weir, hosted by Rose Baker

Docs Ireland Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2020 46:51


It is within the realm of what has become commonly known as ‘artist moving image’ that we continue to encounter models for documentary film practice that are for the most part utterly unlike those we have otherwise become accustomed to. This programme curated for Docs Ireland by aemi (www.aemi.ie) – an organisation dedicated to the support and exhibition of artist and experimental moving image practices – takes its focus primarily on Irish filmmakers and artists, each working outside or stretching the limits of what we traditionally recognise as documentary film. Material legacies Grace Weir, Dust Defying Gravity, 2004, 4 minutes Grace Weir, A Reflection in Light, 2015, 21 mins Renèe Helèna Browne, Daddy’s Boy, 2020, 22 mins Coleen Fitzgibbon, Trip to Carolee, 1974, 5 mins Kelly Gallagher, Pearl Pistols, 2014, 3 minutes Amanda Rice, Death in Geological Time, 2018, 4 minutes Alice Rekab, Migration Sings, 2020, 2 minute

Everybody's National Parks
ENP 32.3 Big Bend: Travel Through Geological Time

Everybody's National Parks

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2020 41:08


For the third in our Big Bend National Park series, Bryan takes an epic trip through eons with Dr. Thomas Shiller, assistant professor of geology at Texas' Sul Ross University. From uplift to erosion, inland seas to volcanic action, the pair discuss this desert park's changing topography and its once-thriving dinosaur population. The hardest hitting questions, however, came from Everybody’s National Parks’ junior geologists, making this episode a real family affair. Discussion includes the following: [00:02] Introduction: ENP Big Bend National Park Series, Dr. Thomas Shiller [01:13] Geological timeline of Big Bend, Chisos Mountains, Santa Elena Canyon [12:03] Night Skies program [12:30] Big Bend: The once-great western interior seaway [13:15] Big Bend’s rich deposit of fossils [17:17] Digging deeper into the park’s Cretaceous Period [17:40] Big Bend’s unique flora and fauna fossils [19:50] Old school tricks of the geologist trade [20:26] Big Bend fossil stewardship [24:21] ENP Grand Canyon geology episode [25:20] More Big Bend fossil stewardship: Paleo Lab at UT Austin [26:33] Big Bend Fossil Discovery Exhibit [30:30] Big Bend ranger programs [30:53] Science Knights in the Morning: YouTube, Facebook, KVLF [32:47] Missing time: Big Bend’s black conical hills and the great extinction event [35:40] ENP’s junior correspondents take the mic (Part I): Western interior seaway facts [35:46] ENP’s junior correspondents take the mic (Part II): A dinosaur census   For complete show notes and archive, visit everybodysnationalparks.com. DUE TO COVID-19 PRECAUTIONS, BIG BEND NATIONAL PARK WAS IN PHASED REOPENING AT TIME OF PUBLISHING THIS EPISODE. PLEASE CHECK NPS WEBSITE FOR ACCESS UPDATES. Actions: Subscribe to our podcast. Tell your friends about Everybody’s National Parks Visit our website https://www.everybodysnationalparks.com/ Send us your national park stories, recommendations, comments, or questions to Hello at everybodysnps.com. Support us on Patreon Follow us on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook Please tag us from the parks you are visiting at #everybodysnationalparks and @everybodysnationalparks

[ENG] Engineering Geology
[ENG01D-EN] Geological Time Scale

[ENG] Engineering Geology

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2019 8:42


Credit title: Subject Matter Expert : Dr. Oki Setyandito, S.T., M.Eng. Dokumenter: Binus University Uploaded by: Knowledge Management and Innovation Binus University

Great Moments In Science
Aboriginal stories accurate

Great Moments In Science

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2018 6:16


For thousands of years, Australian Aboriginal people have accurately passed down information from one generation to the next using oral traditions.

Decipher SciFi : the show about how and why
The Time Machine: HG Wells, geological time scales, and time travel self-consistency w/ Joe Ruppel

Decipher SciFi : the show about how and why

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2017 53:52


H.G. Wells The book, his prescience, and his coinage of the term “time machine.” His scientific literacy and the ideas in the physics and mathematics of his time. Other times he was on the show. Moving through time Dimensions and physics and moving through the invisible dimension of time. Humanity and war Time traveling between wars. The inevitability of global conflict in the late 19th century.  The inevitability of nuclear apocalypse in 1960. The inevitability of humanity overreaching in manipulation of the natural world in 2002. Really large explosions, nuclear and otherwise. Krakatoa vs Tsar Bomba. The year without a summer. Geological scales Time traveling across geological time scales. Tracking in relative space and over miles across the planet’s surface. “Time and space machine.” Staccato time travel. Eloi and Morlocks Human evolution and selective pressures. Humans as cattle. Inefficiency in turning sunlight into steak. Maintaining 19th-century English over millennia. Time travel paradoxes Single-timeline self-consistency. Time travel victory strategies. Books What books would you bring with you to repair future society? Weenas The Time Machine by H.G. Wells: iTunesAmazon The Time Machine (2002): iTunesAmazon Support the show!

42 Minutes
Claire Vaye Watkins: Gold Fame Citrus

42 Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2016


42 Minutes 240: 240: Claire Vaye Watkins - Gold Fame Citrus - 08.29.2016 The program considers the allure and propaganda of the West as well as its harsh realities with Guggenheim fellow, Claire Vaye Watkins, author of the recent Gold Fame Citrus published in 2015 by Riverhead Books. Topics Include: Mojave Desert, Dune, Frank & Brian Herbert, Victorians, Cli-Fy, Corrections, Erotica, Geological Time, White Whale, Kidnapper, Dowser, Cults, Kunzru, Gods Without Men, Benevolent Sexism, Chivalry, Liars, Conmen, Belief, Story Powell, Muir, Melville, Wasteland, Yuca Mountain, Lawns, Water, Cadillac Desert, Stegner, Angel of Repose, Domination. http://clairevayewatkins.com

Sync Book Radio from thesyncbook.com
42 Minutes Episode 240: Claire Vaye Watkins

Sync Book Radio from thesyncbook.com

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2016 45:09


Topics: Mojave Desert, Dune, Frank & Brian Herbert, Victorians, Cli-Fy, Corrections, Erotica, Geological Time, White Whale, Kidnapper, Dowser, Cults, Kunzru, Gods Without Men, Benevolent Sexism, Chivalry, Liars, Conmen, Belief, Story Powell, Muir, Melvil...

Dan The History Man
Episode One: geological Time Scale

Dan The History Man

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2014 18:45


scale geological time
Geology Rocks: Exploring the Earth Sciences
Geology Rocks: Geological Time

Geology Rocks: Exploring the Earth Sciences

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2012 4:53


Ep1 : Join Finley as he travels around the world and back in time! This episode helps us to uncover how Geologists work out how old things are and what they label various periods of time in order to make them easier to reference.

Question of the Week - From the Naked Scientists
Did the dinosaurs have the same seasons as we do?

Question of the Week - From the Naked Scientists

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2010 3:38


We discover whether life in the Cretaceous period was as seasonal as it is today. Did dinosaurs put up with leaves on the line too? Plus, we ask whether it's possible to make a call from a black hole. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists

Geological time - for iPad/Mac/PC
Transcript -- Geological time

Geological time - for iPad/Mac/PC

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2009


Transcript -- A short introduction to this album.

geological time
Geological time - for iPad/Mac/PC

A short introduction to this album.

geological time
Geological time - for iPod/iPhone
Transcript -- Geological time

Geological time - for iPod/iPhone

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2009


Transcript -- A short introduction to this album.

geological time
Geological time - for iPod/iPhone

A short introduction to this album.

geological time
Earth and Life - for iPad/Mac/PC
Transcript -- Daisyworld: Gaia theory and the real world

Earth and Life - for iPad/Mac/PC

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2008


Transcript -- James Lovelock talks about Gaia theory and predictions that tested the theory.

Earth and Life - for iPad/Mac/PC
Daisyworld: Gaia theory and the real world

Earth and Life - for iPad/Mac/PC

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2008 6:21


James Lovelock talks about Gaia theory and predictions that tested the theory.

Earth and Life - for iPod/iPhone
Transcript -- Daisyworld: Gaia theory and the real world

Earth and Life - for iPod/iPhone

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2008


Transcript -- James Lovelock talks about Gaia theory and predictions that tested the theory.

Earth and Life - for iPod/iPhone
Daisyworld: Gaia theory and the real world

Earth and Life - for iPod/iPhone

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2008 6:21


James Lovelock talks about Gaia theory and predictions that tested the theory.