Podcast appearances and mentions of Helen Scales

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Helen Scales

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Best podcasts about Helen Scales

Latest podcast episodes about Helen Scales

Everything Under The Sun
#155 Why Do We Hear the Sea in Seashells? w/ Helen Scales. Why Do Eggs Have Yolks? Why Are Sheepdogs So Intelligent?

Everything Under The Sun

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 14:30


Welcome to Episode #154 of Everything Under the Sun! This week, we’re joined by the brilliant Helen Scales—marine biologist, author of The Sea’s Lure, and expert in all things oceanic—to answer a fascinating question: Why do we hear the sea in seashells? Then, we’ll dive into the natural world to explore the mystery behind why eggs have yolks inside them. And finally, we’ll uncover the secret to why sheepdogs are so incredibly intelligent. Get ready for another episode filled with marine wonders, biological curiosities, and a little canine genius! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Freedom, Books, Flowers & the Moon

This week, we're joined by Harriet Baker, winner of the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award; and Helen Scales tunes into the sonic marvels beneath the surface of the sea.'Rural Hours: The country lives of Virginia Woolf, Sylvia Townsend Warner and Rosamond Lehmann', by Harriet Baker'Sing Like a Fish: How sound rules life under water', by Amorina KingdonProduced by Charlotte Pardy Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

wild acast virginia woolf helen scales sylvia townsend warner sunday times young writer
Oceans: Life Under Water
Creatures of the Deep

Oceans: Life Under Water

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2025 44:03


We've been on a journey beneath the waves, and now we're back. To explore the deepest and darkest corners of the ocean. What does it take to survive in a place that light cannot reach? And how many of these creatures remain undiscovered? Wildlife filmmaker and broadcaster Hannah Stitfall is joined by marine biologist Helen Scales, to discuss some of the most unusual creatures living in the deep sea. And science communicator, Diva Amon, tells us what it's like to be submersed far below sea level. Hannah has also been on a journey of her own. Which we'll tell you more about, later in the series.

MPR News with Kerri Miller
Helen Scales advocates for the ocean in ‘What the Wild Sea Can Be'

MPR News with Kerri Miller

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2024 58:55


When faced with the realities of climate change, marine biologists must hold two competing thoughts simultaneously: The seas are warming, the fish are waning, the corals are bleaching. But that doesn't mean the global ocean is doomed. After all, this is the planet's largest ecosystem. It knows how to adapt.The question is really: Will we enable it or hinder it?Helen Scales lives at the balance of those two intersecting points. A marine biologist, writer and broadcaster, Scales is honest about the scale of change. But as she tells Kerri Miller on this week's Big Books and Bold Ideas, she believes it's not too late. We still have time to figure out how to co-exist sustainably. Her new book, “What the Wild Sea Can Be,” explores practical solutions — like no-fish zones and banning undersea mining — that can give the planet's oceans time to heal.Guest:Helen Scales is a marine biologist, a writer and a storytelling ambassador for the Save Our Seas Foundation. Her newest book is “What the Wild Sea Can Be.” Subscribe to Big Books and Bold Ideas with Kerri Miller on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, RSS or anywhere you get your podcasts.Subscribe to the Thread newsletter for the latest book and author news and must-read recommendations.

Indicast Podcast Network - Mother Feed
The future of our oceans with Helen Scales

Indicast Podcast Network - Mother Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2024 56:21


What mysteries do the world underwater hold for us? Dr Helen Scales, a marine biologist, has dedicated her life to find out. Her most recent book “What the Wild Sea Can Be: The Future of the World's Ocean” is an ode to life underwater and what we can do to preserve it. Dive in to listen to Helen talk about what got her interested in the subject, why sea creatures are smarter than we think and what we can do to scale back climate change, a scourge for both land and water.

The Broadcast from CBC Radio
Economist David Vardy has some advice for Ottawa about northern cod for next year + Marine biologist and author Helen Scales talks about her book, 'What the Wild Sea Can Be'

The Broadcast from CBC Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2024 22:02


David Vardy gave a presentation to the House of Commons Committee on Fisheries and Oceans + Helen Scales talks about the future of the world's ocean in her latest book, "What the Wild Sea Can Be."

World Ocean Radio
Some Ocean Reading

World Ocean Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 5:06


This week on World Ocean Radio, two new books for readers to consider this fall: "The High Seas: Greed, Power, and The Battle for the Unclaimed Ocean" by Olive Heffernan, and "What the Wild Sea Can Be: The Future of the World Ocean" by Helen Scales. Both books evoke hopeful possibility while exploring the extent of the ocean and the implications of ongoing exploitation and excess. About World Ocean Radio World Ocean Radio is a weekly series of five-minute audio essays available for syndicated use at no cost by college and community radio stations worldwide. Peter Neill, Director of the World Ocean Observatory and host of World Ocean Radio, provides coverage of a broad spectrum of ocean issues from science and education to advocacy and exemplary projects.World Ocean Radio 14 Years, 730+ Episodes Ocean is climate Climate is ocean The sea connects all thingsWorld Ocean Radio: 5-minute weekly insights in ocean science, advocacy, education, global ocean issues, challenges, marine science, policy, and solutions. Hosted by Peter Neill, Director of the W2O. Learn more at worldoceanobservatory.org

Sea Control - CIMSEC
Sea Control 547 – What the Wild Sea Can Be with Dr. Helen Scales

Sea Control - CIMSEC

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2024


By Jared Samuelson Dr. Helen Scales joins the program to discuss the future of the world’s oceans and the environmental threats that they face. Helen Scales, PhD, is a marine biologist, writer, and broadcaster. She is the author of many books about the ocean including The Brilliant Abyss and Spirals in Time, and the children's … Continue reading Sea Control 547 – What the Wild Sea Can Be with Dr. Helen Scales →

Sea Control
Sea Control 547 What the Wild Sea Can Be with Dr. Helen Scales

Sea Control

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2024 35:28


 What The Wild Sea Can Be – The Future of the World's Ocean, by Helen Scales, Atlantic Monthly Press, 2024. Sea Control 246 – Beyond Static Spatial Management with Dr. Guillermo Ortuño Crespo and Andrea GalassiTwitter: @helenscales

Something Shiny: ADHD!
Summer Starter Series: How do we find our worth in a world that doesn't value us?

Something Shiny: ADHD!

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2024 29:34


David and Isabelle navigated the treacherous landscape of surviving and being the lucky ones; are we trash? Are we seahorses? From defeating the enemy that is loose glitter, to brain regions resembling animals, to why it hurts when we beat up on ourselves, tackling the pain and looking at ourselves with intention. ——Isabelle was told she's a talker, but she's also a listener. There's this thing Isabelle borrows from mindfulness practices and therapy ideas: what you resist persists, what you go with flows, go for the ride. She had this moment the other day, at what point is it going to be bore her? She is easily bored, she is initially excited about and then she loses interest in it, she can be hyper fixated on the thing and then it passes, and then why is it that she's never been bored in a session—it's never happened: when will it not be exciting or curious? It's not the same thing as it being easy or effortless, challenge does not mean something isn't fun, and maybe it's one of her favorite things to do. David names: it's amazing to be put into an environment where it's dangerous if you don't pay attention to listening, attending to the patterns and themes in the group—it's almost what I've done in my entire life. Find ways to honor ourselves. I want someone to be able to look at me and respectfully out himself more often, and we don't see the models are dysfunction. “This kid having ADHD and being in jail” is part of the story. Until everything is shiny! Glitter! Except loose glitter which is Isabelle's worst nightmare. She learned, the hard way, that loose glitter found it's way into her world, the moment you try to clean it up, it's “this glitter will be here always.” The glitter's arch nemesis is tape—you're welcome everybody. You still have to sit there for hours, but it makes the cleanup satisfying. David has had the thought of rooms with too much glitter and thought: burn this room. Isabelle names that this is different when there is epoxy style glitter in a floor or a tile, or in a shoe—she loves how there's a lot of glittery shoes, but the glitter is contained in a plastic shell. And there's something amazing about the shiny but it needs to stay shiny and not be embedded in anyone's skin. Isabelle's friend pointed this out: David has a pleasant voice, and Isabelle, back in high school, was on speech team, and she competed in radio speaking, where you essentially you get to be in a room separate from everybody and record into a microphone. That got her over her fear of public speaking, only they used tapes and tape recorders. Who knew? These little things, not exactly fate v. Free will—isn't it interesting the things that had to come into play were miraculous or exponentially improbable. David thinks his survival in life is pretty lucky. Like LeDerick said, we're statistically survivors, how did we get there? David is sometimes looking at a river and it's all pristine and there's this piece of trash attached to a log not getting sucked down the river, and that's him, he's a piece of trash, and he got saved. He was powerless being swept by the current—a lot of us were—whether we found partners, or friends, or jobs or something. The odds of David getting an advanced degree, being in a counseling practice, and having the same diagnosis. There was a moment in their office, it was Isabelle's first or second month, and we were talking about structure and stuff, and it went brain-seahorse. And David went “maybe…maybe…” and everyone else just saw, it's going to go somewhere else. To finish the thought: once seahorses have partnered, upon the first rays of sunlight entering the ocean, they will do a synchronized dance to each other. Speaking of seahorses: the hippocampus is the part of the brain is responsible for episodic memory, ability to time stamp when something has happened in our life, seal it with a declarative context—and to connect it to David's trash metaphor, how a seahorse gets around: it attaches to kelp or seaweed and it floats on the currents, and it mates for life, and takes care of it's babies, and it does not make sense, and it exists nonetheless. Isabelle doesn't think we're trash on a river, we're the seahorses. David names that 50% of people with ADHD don't graduate on time. Isabelle names: a lot seahorses don't survive, statistically there's so many don't make it. David names there's a lot of compassion and meaning to what we see—Isabelle is doing a lot of shaming to the trash. David is not trying to say we're mistakes, but he doesn't think the system sees value in us, but we have to see value in ourselves. You see me, I see you, grab my hand, we'll do things together, we are trying to survive. David is never going to judge survival. Isabelle quotes Carl Rogers, when the potato sprouts, it's doesn't matter if it's in the earth or in the root cellar, it will reach out toward the little shaft of light, and he talks about it as an actualizing tendency, we're always going toward the sunlight, and everyone else is casting shame “silly potato” but it's doing what it does. The labels that we put on things can be really distracting, and there's a big debate about diagnosing, and David names that labels can be minimizing and restrictive, but with ADHD, there's some power in that label, in knowing you're not alone, that it's really hard when you're dealing with internal invisible motivational things, it's easy to think there's something wrong with you, and you need to spend time with people that don't make you feel like trash, and you spend time doing things, and you don't trash yourself. But also, David identifies with the trash in the river. ANd things changed when he didn't need the system to find value. How do you relate to yourself in seeing the value you hold and knowing that. It connects to internal family systems, there's this interesting idea that the reason why when you're beating yourself up, it causes actual pain—there's another part, however small or exiled, there is another part that is taking that hit. When we're beating ourselves up, a part of us is trying to convince the part that desperately doesn't want it to be true. It's like trying to beat down a part that inherently knows it has value. It's not just practicing and noticing the strengths and the peaks, but also having the space and safety to grieve, that you had a lot more peaks, and lot of people missed it, and you were wrong about you, too—there's a whole reckoning. David would use this question to ground himself: “when did that not happen?” Oh, with these people, in that place, when I'm doing x—“where does it not happen?” Even looking at childhood, “my parents were always angry”—when were they not? This makes Isabelle think of your default neural network—you're brain is going to always do the thing that it's most used to, because it's more efficient to do the thing you do every day—if you're not actively or intentionally trying to counter that, you're going to coast—and if you've been knocked down, and you've been hit harder and felt it more acutely than most, and you're default mode is going to be rough, and it does take concentrated effort to work with this, and that's where environments and community comes in. Dr. Daniel Siegel - the neurons that fire together, wire togetherCoolest books about seahorses - Poseidon's Steed: The Story of Seahorses, from Myth to Reality by Dr. Helen Scales, Ph.D.Carl Rogers quote “potato sprout”...

BBC Inside Science
How do we solve antibiotic resistance?

BBC Inside Science

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2024 28:02


The looming danger of antibiotic resistance may have fallen out of the public consciousness but is still very much in the mind of those in public healthcare and research. As promising new research is published, the University of Birmingham's Laura Piddock and GP Margaret McCartney get to the bottom of why antibiotic resistance is still so difficult to tackle. Marine biologist Helen Scales joins us in the studio to talk about her new book “What the Wild Sea Could Be” which uses changes in the Earth's past to predict what we can expect to happen to our oceans in the coming years. Cosmologist Andrew Pontzen speculates on what happens in and around the extreme environment of a black hole as news of the first observations of the “plunging zone” comes to light. And as the EU head to ban smoky flavoured crisps we ask what the science behind this decision is with Food scientist Stuart Farrimond. Presenter: Marnie Chesterton Producers: Ella Hubber and Hannah Robins Researcher: Caitlin Kennedy Editor: Martin Smith Production Co-ordinator: Jana Bennett-Holesworth

No Such Thing As A Fish
535: No Such Thing As An Inside-Out Dolphin

No Such Thing As A Fish

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2024 61:48


Anna, Andrew, James and Helen Scales discuss curious cephalopods, destitute decapods, parky penguins, and munificent midlanders. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish for ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon

The Whole Tooth
Around the ocean in 80 sharks with Dr Helen Scales

The Whole Tooth

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2024 67:26


Sharks with beards. Deep sea sharks with glow-in-the-dark bellies. Sharks that take on submarines. Sharks that walk instead of swim and rays with a hedge trimmer for a nose…this episode has it all! We explore the fantastic diversity of sharks and their relatives (and of all marine life!) with marine biologist, scientific writer and broadcaster Dr Helen Scales, ahead of the release of her new book, What the Wild Sea Can Be. Join us as we travel from the ocean depths to the shallowest rockpools, meeting a colourful bunch of characters along the way. Timestamps: 05.01 - Helen's career journey from scientist to writer 16.33 - Pom-pom crabs, cleaner wrasse 22.14 - Sharks! Lanternsharks, greenland sharks, walking sharks, shysharks 27.10 - Sharks in history and culture 32.30 - The deep sea! 47.04 - Deep sea sharks 51.00 - What the Wild Sea Can Be and the future of our ocean Shownotes: www.saveourseas.com/worldofsharks/podcast Helen's Instagram: @drhelenscales Helen's twitter: @helenscales Website:  https://helenscales.com/ Helen's latest book: https://atlantic-books.co.uk/book/what-the-wild-sea-can-be/ Save Our Seas Foundation is on instagram (@saveourseasfoundation) and x/twitter (@SaveOurSeas).

Oceans: Life Under Water
7 | Octopuses

Oceans: Life Under Water

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 38:14


They're like aliens from another planet. There are over 300 species and counting, from the size of your fingernail to 10 metres across. They live on the ocean's surface, and in its darkest depths. But how intelligent are they, really? How do they use tools? And what's it like to meet one in the wild? Eminent marine biologist and science communicator Helen Scales joins Hannah in the studio. Also - meet Gretchen Früh-Green, one of the scientists who discovered the Lost City, which some believe could be the origin of all life on Earth. Follow us on IG, X and TikTok for bonus content and to see footage of the world's biggest octopus nursery: @oceanspod. Watch the coconut-carrying octopus here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RUN6c5yWJhQ If you want to know more about the oceans and how to protect them, come and join us here: https://act.gp/life-under-water.

BBC Inside Science
Laboratory-Grown Meat

BBC Inside Science

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2024 28:10


Professor Ben Garrod guest presents. As a new 'meaty rice' is created and Fortnum & Mason launch a scotch egg made with cultivated meat that they hope to have on sale as early as next year, we investigate the world of laboratory-grown meat. Mark Post made the first ever synthetic meat in 2012 to the tune of £200,000. He tells us how these lab-grown meats are made and how, he thinks, they could play an important role in reducing greenhouse gas emissions and feeding a growing population. Jenny Kleeman, author of Sex, Robots and Vegan Meat, is more sceptical, citing concerns over food security and if the public really want to eat this stuff. A stingray called Charlotte has become pregnant, despite there being no other stingrays in her tank at the Aquarium & Shark Lab in North Carolina. Marine biologist Dr Helen Scales considers how this may have happened. And cosmic minerologist Sara Russell from the Natural History Museum tells us how astronomers tracked and found a particularly unusual asteroid entering Earth's atmosphere and what we might learn from it.  Presenter: Professor Ben Garrod Producers: Hannah Robins, Florian Bohr, Alice Lipscombe-Southwell and Jonathan Blackwell Editor: Martin Smith Production Co-ordinator: Jana Bennett-Holesworth  BBC Inside Science is produced in collaboration with the Open University.

Oceans: Life Under Water
1 | The Water Planet

Oceans: Life Under Water

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2024 44:05


Welcome to the oceans. Want to know how it feels to dive 65m under the waves in a single breath? Or why worms in coral reefs are so exciting? Wildlife filmmaker and broadcaster Hannah Stitfall is joined by freediving icon Daan Verhoeven, and esteemed marine biologist and science communicator Helen Scales explains why she's still optimistic about the oceans' future. Also - we'll be on board a ship setting sail from Panama to the Galapagos Islands, a journey we'll be following over the course of the podcast. Follow us on IG, X and TikTok for bonus content and incredible underwater footage: @oceanspod. If you want to know more about the oceans and how to protect them, come and join us here: https://act.gp/life-under-water. Helen's website is https://helenscales.com/.

In Our Time
Plankton

In Our Time

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 48:41


Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the tiny drifting organisms in the oceans that sustain the food chain for all the lifeforms in the water and so for the billions of people who, in turn, depend on the seas for their diet. In Earth's development, the plant-like ones among them, the phytoplankton, produced so much oxygen through photosynthesis that around half the oxygen we breathe today originated there. And each day as the sun rises, the animal ones, the zooplankton, sink to the depths of the seas to avoid predators in such density that they appear on ship sonars like a new seabed, only to rise again at night in the largest migration of life on this planet. With Carol Robinson Professor of Marine Sciences at the University of East Anglia Abigail McQuatters-Gollop Associate Professor of Marine Conservation at the University of Plymouth And Christopher Lowe Lecturer in Marine Biology at Swansea University Producer: Simon Tillotson Reading list: Juli Berwald, Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and the Art of Growing a Backbone (Riverhead Books, 2018) Sir Alister Hardy, The Open Sea: The World of Plankton (first published 1959; Collins New Naturalist Library, 2009) Richard Kirby, Ocean Drifters: A Secret World Beneath the Waves (Studio Cactus Ltd, 2010) Robert Kunzig, Mapping the Deep: The Extraordinary Story of Ocean Science (Sort Of Books, 2000) Christian Sardet, Plankton: Wonders of the Drifting World (University of Chicago Press, 2015) Helen Scales, The Brilliant Abyss: True Tales of Exploring the Deep Sea, Discovering Hidden Life and Selling the Seabed (Bloomsbury Sigma, 2022)

In Our Time: Science

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the tiny drifting organisms in the oceans that sustain the food chain for all the lifeforms in the water and so for the billions of people who, in turn, depend on the seas for their diet. In Earth's development, the plant-like ones among them, the phytoplankton, produced so much oxygen through photosynthesis that around half the oxygen we breathe today originated there. And each day as the sun rises, the animal ones, the zooplankton, sink to the depths of the seas to avoid predators in such density that they appear on ship sonars like a new seabed, only to rise again at night in the largest migration of life on this planet. With Carol Robinson Professor of Marine Sciences at the University of East Anglia Abigail McQuatters-Gollop Associate Professor of Marine Conservation at the University of Plymouth And Christopher Lowe Lecturer in Marine Biology at Swansea University Producer: Simon Tillotson Reading list: Juli Berwald, Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and the Art of Growing a Backbone (Riverhead Books, 2018) Sir Alister Hardy, The Open Sea: The World of Plankton (first published 1959; Collins New Naturalist Library, 2009) Richard Kirby, Ocean Drifters: A Secret World Beneath the Waves (Studio Cactus Ltd, 2010) Robert Kunzig, Mapping the Deep: The Extraordinary Story of Ocean Science (Sort Of Books, 2000) Christian Sardet, Plankton: Wonders of the Drifting World (University of Chicago Press, 2015) Helen Scales, The Brilliant Abyss: True Tales of Exploring the Deep Sea, Discovering Hidden Life and Selling the Seabed (Bloomsbury Sigma, 2022)

Something Shiny: ADHD!
How do we find our worth in a world that doesn't value us?

Something Shiny: ADHD!

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2023 27:50


David and Isabelle navigated the treacherous landscape of surviving and being the lucky ones; are we trash? Are we seahorses? From defeating the enemy that is loose glitter, to brain regions resembling animals, to why it hurts when we beat up on ourselves, tackling the pain and looking at ourselves with intention. ——Isabelle was told she's a talker, but she's also a listener. There's this thing Isabelle borrows from mindfulness practices and therapy ideas: what you resist persists, what you go with flows, go for the ride. She had this moment the other day, at what point is it going to be bore her? She is easily bored, she is initially excited about and then she loses interest in it, she can be hyper fixated on the thing and then it passes, and then why is it that she's never been bored in a session—it's never happened: when will it not be exciting or curious? It's not the same thing as it being easy or effortless, challenge does not mean something isn't fun, and maybe it's one of her favorite things to do. David names: it's amazing to be put into an environment where it's dangerous if you don't pay attention to listening, attending to the patterns and themes in the group—it's almost what I've done in my entire life. Find ways to honor ourselves. I want someone to be able to look at me and respectfully out himself more often, and we don't see the models are dysfunction. “This kid having ADHD and being in jail” is part of the story. Until everything is shiny! Glitter! Except loose glitter which is Isabelle's worst nightmare. She learned, the hard way, that loose glitter found it's way into her world, the moment you try to clean it up, it's “this glitter will be here always.” The glitter's arch nemesis is tape—you're welcome everybody. You still have to sit there for hours, but it makes the cleanup satisfying. David has had the thought of rooms with too much glitter and thought: burn this room. Isabelle names that this is different when there is epoxy style glitter in a floor or a tile, or in a shoe—she loves how there's a lot of glittery shoes, but the glitter is contained in a plastic shell. And there's something amazing about the shiny but it needs to stay shiny and not be embedded in anyone's skin. Isabelle's friend pointed this out: David has a pleasant voice, and Isabelle, back in high school, was on speech team, and she competed in radio speaking, where you essentially you get to be in a room separate from everybody and record into a microphone. That got her over her fear of public speaking, only they used tapes and tape recorders. Who knew? These little things, not exactly fate v. Free will—isn't it interesting the things that had to come into play were miraculous or exponentially improbable. David thinks his survival in life is pretty lucky. Like LeDerick said, we're statistically survivors, how did we get there? David is sometimes looking at a river and it's all pristine and there's this piece of trash attached to a log not getting sucked down the river, and that's him, he's a piece of trash, and he got saved. He was powerless being swept by the current—a lot of us were—whether we found partners, or friends, or jobs or something. The odds of David getting an advanced degree, being in a counseling practice, and having the same diagnosis. There was a moment in their office, it was Isabelle's first or second month, and we were talking about structure and stuff, and it went brain-seahorse. And David went “maybe…maybe…” and everyone else just saw, it's going to go somewhere else. To finish the thought: once seahorses have partnered, upon the first rays of sunlight entering the ocean, they will do a synchronized dance to each other. Speaking of seahorses: the hippocampus is the part of the brain is responsible for episodic memory, ability to time stamp when something has happened in our life, seal it with a declarative context—and to connect it to David's trash metaphor, how a seahorse gets around: it attaches to kelp or seaweed and it floats on the currents, and it mates for life, and takes care of it's babies, and it does not make sense, and it exists nonetheless. Isabelle doesn't think we're trash on a river, we're the seahorses. David names that 50% of people with ADHD don't graduate on time. Isabelle names: a lot seahorses don't survive, statistically there's so many don't make it. David names there's a lot of compassion and meaning to what we see—Isabelle is doing a lot of shaming to the trash. David is not trying to say we're mistakes, but he doesn't think the system sees value in us, but we have to see value in ourselves. You see me, I see you, grab my hand, we'll do things together, we are trying to survive. David is never going to judge survival. Isabelle quotes Carl Rogers, when the potato sprouts, it's doesn't matter if it's in the earth or in the root cellar, it will reach out toward the little shaft of light, and he talks about it as an actualizing tendency, we're always going toward the sunlight, and everyone else is casting shame “silly potato” but it's doing what it does. The labels that we put on things can be really distracting, and there's a big debate about diagnosing, and David names that labels can be minimizing and restrictive, but with ADHD, there's some power in that label, in knowing you're not alone, that it's really hard when you're dealing with internal invisible motivational things, it's easy to think there's something wrong with you, and you need to spend time with people that don't make you feel like trash, and you spend time doing things, and you don't trash yourself. But also, David identifies with the trash in the river. ANd things changed when he didn't need the system to find value. How do you relate to yourself in seeing the value you hold and knowing that. It connects to internal family systems, there's this interesting idea that the reason why when you're beating yourself up, it causes actual pain—there's another part, however small or exiled, there is another part that is taking that hit. When we're beating ourselves up, a part of us is trying to convince the part that desperately doesn't want it to be true. It's like trying to beat down a part that inherently knows it has value. It's not just practicing and noticing the strengths and the peaks, but also having the space and safety to grieve, that you had a lot more peaks, and lot of people missed it, and you were wrong about you, too—there's a whole reckoning. David would use this question to ground himself: “when did that not happen?” Oh, with these people, in that place, when I'm doing x—“where does it not happen?” Even looking at childhood, “my parents were always angry”—when were they not? This makes Isabelle think of your default neural network—you're brain is going to always do the thing that it's most used to, because it's more efficient to do the thing you do every day—if you're not actively or intentionally trying to counter that, you're going to coast—and if you've been knocked down, and you've been hit harder and felt it more acutely than most, and you're default mode is going to be rough, and it does take concentrated effort to work with this, and that's where environments and community comes in. Dr. Daniel Siegel - the neurons that fire together, wire togetherCoolest books about seahorses - Poseidon's Steed: The Story of Seahorses, from Myth to Reality by Dr. Helen Scales, Ph.D.Carl Rogers quote “potato sprout”Internal Family Systems - all the parts of youDefault Neural Network (AKA Default Mode Network) - brain process that -----Cover Art by: Sol VázquezTechnical Support by: Bobby Richards—————

Schwebende Bücher
30.02. Helen Scales - In 80 Meerestieren um die Welt (Isabelle Sahner)

Schwebende Bücher

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2023 2:15


Zu Land und in der Luft waren wir mit den Vorgänger-Titeln schon – fehlt also noch zu Wasser! Dies ist eine erstaunliche Reise durch die Weltmeere und zu 80 ihrer bemerkenswertesten Bewohner. Das bildschön illustrierte Buch enthält faszinierende Geschichten von Fischen, Muscheln und anderen Meeresbewohnern, die das Leben der Menschen auf oft überraschende und unerwartete Weise beeinflusst haben – sei es in der Medizin oder Kultur. Für alle Menschen, die sich für das Meer, die Ozeane und ihre Bewohner interessieren das gefundene Geschenk für fast alle Anlässe!Quelle: Verlagstext

Literatur Radio Hörbahn
Zeichen & Zeiten: Helen Scales – In 80 Meerestieren um die Welt

Literatur Radio Hörbahn

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2023 7:33


eine Rezension von Constanze Matthes Das Meer – gefühlt unendliche Weiten. Wir schreiben das Jahr 2023 und begeben uns auf eine unglaubliche Reise. Eine Tour um die Welt in 80 Tagen – unter Wasser. Wir brauchen keine Taucher-Ausrüstung anzulegen, kein Flugzeug zu besteigen, um nahe wie ferne Orte zu bereisen. Wir brauchen nur dieses eine Buch: Helen Scales‘ faszinierender weil lehrreicher und wunderbar illustrierter Band „In 80 Meerestieren um die Welt“. … Constanze Matthes, ich bin Journalistin und leidenschaftliche Leserin. Die Liebe zu den Büchern begann im zarten Alter von vier, fünf Jahren, als meine Mutter mich zum ersten Mal in die kleine Bücherei unseres Dorfes mitnahm. Wenige Jahre später schleppte ich die Bücher dann stapelweise allein nach Hause. In der Schule las ich stets die Pflichtlektüre und war meinen Mitschülern ein gern gesehener Gesprächspartner, um den Inhalt des zu lesenden Buches in der Pause vor der Deutschstunde zu erzählen. Sollte man an dieser Stelle „verraten“ sagen? Nach dem Abitur und einem Auslandsaufenthalt in Norwegen studierte ich im Hauptfach Germanistik mit Schwerpunkt Literaturwissenschaft. Allerdings las ich dann nicht immer die Pflichtlektüre der mehrseitigen Lektüreliste und besuchte viel eher die wunderbare Bibliothek des Deutschen Literaturinstituts. Vor allem dann, wenn meine Mitbewohnerin den Koffer-Fernseher über das Wochenende wieder nach Hause mitnahm. Noch heute bin ich „fernseherlos“ und investiere vielmehr meine Zeit in große und kleine Geschichten, dicke und dünne Bücher. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hoerbahn/message

Kathy Sullivan Explores
Farewell for Now

Kathy Sullivan Explores

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 8:50


 Dear Explorer, On June 10, 2021, I launched the Kathy Sullivan Explores podcast. Many of us were under some form of a lockdown back then, and the podcast has helped me connect in ways that were previously impossible to imagine. Through our journey together, we've explored science, art, space, and memorable moments in my life all while speaking to brilliant guests. It has truly been an incredible privilege to share stories, insights, and inspiring conversations with you all. In this episode, I want to express my deepest gratitude to you all for joining me on this remarkable journey of exploration via podcast. I also outline the different episode categories you can continue exploring on the podcast website and explain how you can stay connected and be the first to get updates on my future projects and endeavors. “This farewell doesn't have to be the end of our journey together. Continue on, Explorer, learning and sharing in the spirit of curiosity, adventure, and discovery.” - Kathy Sullivan This week on Kathy Sullivan Explores: ●     Charlie Bolden's pathway to space and other remarkable episodes in the “Space” category●     Conversations with creatives and how they forged artistic careers●     Exploring the sea and other oceanic gems from Helen Scales, Tim McDonald, Victor Viscovo, and others●     Career and leadership insights from Glen Maroney and Yvette McGee Brown●     Conversations on exploring the world with Elizabeth McCormick, Jeffrey Kingsley, and Alastair Humphreys●     Memorable moments from my life—from wearing a baked potato to presenting an Oscar to George Lucas from space Our Favorite Quotes: ●     “From business leaders, writers, artists, fellow explorers, scientists, divers, and astronauts, their wisdom and experiences have left an indelible mark on our collective exploration.” - Kathy Sullivan●     “Astronauts stand on the shoulders of many hundreds of other space professionals.” - Kathy Sullivan Explore the podcast by theme: ●     Space●     Creativity●     Sea●     Memorable Moments●     Career and Leadership●     Places Spaceship Not Required I'm Kathy Sullivan, the only person to have walked in space and gone to the deepest point in the ocean. I'm an explorer, and that doesn't always have to involve going to some remote or exotic place. It simply requires a commitment to put curiosity into action. In this podcast, you can explore, reflecting on lessons learned from life so far and from my brilliant and ever-inquisitive guests. We explore together in this very moment from right where you are--spaceship not required. Welcome to Kathy Sullivan Explores. Visit my website at kathysullivanexplores.com to sign up for seven astronaut tips to improving your life on earth and be the first to discover future episodes and learn about more exciting adventures ahead! Don't forget to leave a rating and review wherever you get your podcasts! Spotify I Stitcher I Apple Podcasts I iHeart Radio I TuneIn I Google I Amazon Music.

Science Focus Podcast
Why the next gold rush is happening at the bottom of the ocean

Science Focus Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2023 34:11


We now know that the deep sea is full of bizarre creatures, and these have found a special place in our imaginations. But some people have their eyes on a different sort of ocean riches: the rare minerals and metals embedded in underwater mountains and rocks for use in everything from phones to electric cars. At the time of recording, representatives from countries around the world have just decided to delay a decision on deep sea mining laws by two years. So what's the deal with the seabed, and why is everyone talking about it right now? Marine biologist Dr Helen Scales joins us for today's podcast to talk about deep sea mining, the lures of the ocean's resources, and the fine balance between exploration and exploitation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

On Point
Deep-sea mining: Climate solution or ecological threat?

On Point

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 47:18


The International Seabed Authority is meeting to devise regulations that could allow mining of the deep ocean floor for minerals needed for green energy technology. But bringing those minerals to the surface could disrupt delicate deep-sea ecosystems. Gerard Barron, Helen Scales and Andrew Sweetman join Meghna Chakrabarti.

Kathy Sullivan Explores
The Joyous Wonder of the Ocean

Kathy Sullivan Explores

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2023 81:39


Helen Scales is a British marine biologist, writer, and broadcaster. Her passion for underwater exploration started when she learned to scuba dive as part of the Duke of Edinburgh's Award program. She has worked with the World Wide Fund for Nature, TRAFFIC International, and Natural England throughout her illustrious career. Helen is also the author of The Brilliant Abyss: Exploring the Majestic Hidden Life of the Deep Ocean and the Looming Threat That Imperils It, which explores the majesty and mystery of an underwater world few are privileged to see. Helen joins me today to discuss her passion for ocean exploration and the inspiration behind her books. She shares how being in love with the ocean shaped her hobbies and career interests. You'll hear about the dives she did in various tropical countries and the marine conservation programs she and her team helped fund along the way. She explains her concern about marine wildlife welfare and why people should take marine conservation seriously. You'll also gain insight into Helen's thoughts on deep diving and the books she has planned for the future.   "What I would love to see is more people celebrating the joyous wonder of the ocean and what lives there—not how we can conquer it or make money out of it." - Helen Scales   This week on Kathy Sullivan Explores: Where Helen's passion for sea exploration started Collecting shells, painting them, and other ocean-related hobbies Marine-related careers that run in Helen's family The rise of green awareness in the '90s How to earn the Duke of Edinburgh's Award Helen's personal rating of her writing skills Doing dives in Belize and other countries, finishing her Ph.D., and helping kids along the way Exploring tropical countries and helping them refine their tourism programs Helen's first encounter with a seahorse Helen's thoughts on the lack of marine conservation awareness Why Helen looks forward to blackwater diving Deep diving in the abyss and overcoming claustrophobia Helen answers lightning-round questions The one thing Helen wants people to know about the ocean The books Helen intends to write in the future Connect with Helen Scales: Helen Scales Official Website Book: The Brilliant Abyss: Exploring the Majestic Hidden Life of the Deep Ocean and the Looming Threat That Imperils It Book: The Great Barrier Reef Helen Scales on Instagram Helen Scales on Twitter Spaceship Not Required I'm Kathy Sullivan, the only person to have walked in space and gone to the deepest point in the ocean. I'm an explorer, and that doesn't always have to involve going to some remote or exotic place. It simply requires a commitment to put curiosity into action. In this podcast, you can explore, reflecting on lessons learned from life so far and from my brilliant and ever-inquisitive guests. We explore together in this very moment from right where you are--spaceship not required. Welcome to Kathy Sullivan Explores. Visit my website at kathysullivanexplores.com to sign up for seven astronaut tips to improving your life on earth and be the first to discover future episodes and learn about more exciting adventures ahead! Don't forget to leave a rating and review wherever you get your podcasts! Spotify I Stitcher I Apple Podcasts I iHeart Radio I TuneIn | Google | Amazon Music.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Big Biology
A journey into the brilliant abyss (Ep 92)

Big Biology

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2022 58:39


What hidden life lies at the bottom of the deep ocean? How do so many species survive and even thrive with so little light and food and at such pressure? In this episode, we talk to Helen Scales, a marine biologist, writer, and broadcaster who has written the essential guidebook to the deep ocean titled “The Brilliant Abyss”. On our way to the bottom of the sea, Helen recounted her journey from academia to writing and shared some of the lessons for others looking to dive into science communication. She also introduced us to some of her favorite species and their unique adaptations for surviving at extreme depths as well as several threats that the deep ocean faces. Technology has not only opened up this ecosystem to exploration but also to exploitation. Helen lays out the current state of ocean conservation and offers some hope and advice to those looking to protect the planet's largest habitat. Cover art: Keating Shahmehri

The Science Hour
Should we mine the deep sea?

The Science Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2022 53:37 Very Popular


The first license of its kind has been granted for deep-sea mining. It will be used to run early tests to see whether the seabed could be good place to harvest rare earth materials in the future. These earth minerals are what powers much of our modern technology, and the demand is growing year on year. The license raises ethical questions about whether anyone has ownership over the seabed, and whether we could be disrupting ecosystems under the sea in doing so. We have two experts joining us to discuss the scientific implications. They are marine biologist, Dr Helen Scales and Bramley Murton from the National Oceanographic Centre, Southampton University. Also on the programme, we build on last week's discussion about growing opportunities for researchers on the African continent. We look at how programmes of genomic sequencing are offering opportunities for Africa-based researchers, that haven't been available before. We talk to Thilo Kreuger, a PhD student at Curtin University, Western Australia, who's behind the discovery of a whole new species of carnivorous plants. We discuss what it's like fulfilling a lifelong dream to discover more about these spectacular plant species. Crowdscience listener Alix has a burning question - what's actually happening inside the flames of a campfire to make it glow? And why do some materials burn easily, while others refuse to light at all? Why don't some things burn? Alex Lathbridge travels to the Fire Research Centre at the University of Edinburgh to (safely) set various things ablaze. He learns about the fundamentals of fire and why things react differently to heat. He then heads to archives of the Royal Institution of London, to see an invention from the 19th century that can stop a fireball in its tracks: the miner's safety lamp, which saved countless lives. And he speaks to a chemist about the science of flame retardants, and how even though they can make products less flammable, they may also have unintended consequences. (Image: The Metals Company plans to mine the seafloor for these nodules containing nickel, cobalt, and manganese in the Clarion Clipperton Zone of the Pacific Ocean. (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Science in Action
Should we mine the deep sea?

Science in Action

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2022 26:33 Very Popular


The first license of its kind has been granted for deep-sea mining. It will be used to run early tests to see whether the seabed could be good place to harvest rare earth materials in the future. These earth minerals are what powers much of our modern technology, and the demand is growing year on year. The license raises ethical questions about whether anyone has ownership over the seabed, and whether we could be disrupting ecosystems under the sea in doing so. We have two experts joining us to discuss the scientific implications. They are marine biologist, Dr Helen Scales and Bramley Murton from the National Oceanographic Centre, Southampton University. Also on the programme, we build on last week's discussion about growing opportunities for researchers on the African continent. We look at how programmes of genomic sequencing are offering opportunities for Africa-based researchers, that haven't been available before. And lastly, we talk to Thilo Kreuger, a PhD student at Curtin University, Western Australia, who's behind the discovery of a whole new species of carnivorous plants. We discuss what it's like fulfilling a lifelong dream to discover more about these spectacular plant species. (Image: The Metals Company plans to mine the seafloor for these nodules containing nickel, cobalt, and manganese in the Clarion Clipperton Zone of the Pacific Ocean. (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) Presenter: Roland Pease Producer: Harrison Lewis, Robbie Wojciechowski

Science Focus Podcast
Seashells with Dr Helen Scales

Science Focus Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2022 27:37


Marine biologist, broadcaster and author Dr Helen Scales tells us all about seashells, where to find them, and what they can reveal about their inhabitants. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Everything Under The Sun
97. How are sea shells formed? With Helen Scales. What is the rarest animal in the world? How long can frogs survive underwater?

Everything Under The Sun

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 14:06


On this award-winning show Molly Oldfield, the original QI elf, Guardian kids' quiz compiler and writer (of four books), answers questions sent in by children around the world. This week, we're continuing our new season of Everything Under the Sun with a wonderful episode featuring author and marine biologist Helen Scales. Helen answers a question sent in by Rian about how shells are formed, explaining which animals create which shells, and how! And Molly answers two more curious questions from our listeners: ‘what is the rarest animal in the world?' from Alex and ‘how long can frogs last underwater?' from Lola! Tune in for lots of sunshine and fun and subscribe so you don't miss an episode! We hope you enjoy and thank you so much for supporting Everything Under the Sun! Everything Under the Sun is also a book! Check it out here: www.mollyoldfield.com/everything-under-the-sun! Follow us on social media:Instagram: @everythingunderthesunpod @mollyoldfieldwritesTwitter: @MollyOldfieldFacebook: Everything Under the Sun Contact Helen Scales here - https://helenscales.com/portfolio/contact-me-2/follow her on Instagram @drHelenScales and Twitter @helenscalesAnd a big thanks to Orchard Toys for sponsoring today's episode. Check out their products at https://www.orchardtoys.com/?gclid=CjwKCAjw7IeUBhBbEiwADhiEMYWHJjTBGicjoL3haYmZthVHu4cCX2V2YN7mTLoRLar4F-yMLoKOORoCk4wQAvD_BwEAlso, give them a follow on Instagram at @orchardtoysThank you! Have a lovely week. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Faith 'N Fish'N
Tyler Daniels of Fishers of Men Kayak Tournaments

Faith 'N Fish'N

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 64:23


This episode we've got Tyler Daniels, director of the Fishers of Men Kayak Tournaments in Central Ohio talking about youth ministry, bass fishing, and more! We also talk about something I never would have thought about if I hadn't of done it in Learn From My Mistake, the Wilderness Systems Kayak Cart in the Product Spotlight, and Eye of the Shoal by Dr. Helen Scales in Whatcha Read'N! All Things Faith 'N Fish'N | Wilderness Systems Cart Assembly

I Don't Know About That
E94 The Great Barrier Reef

I Don't Know About That

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 84:42


In this episode, the team discusses The Great Barrier Reef with marine biologist, teacher at Cambridge University, and author of the Guardian bestseller "Spirals in Time", Dr. Helen Scales. Go to HelenScales.com to learn more and purchase her books, including her upcoming children's book, "The Great Barrier Reef", coming out in June! Follow Dr. Helen on Instagram @DrHelenScales and on Twitter @HelenScales. Subscribe to our Patreon at patreon.com/IDKAT for ad free episodes, bonus episodes, and more exclusive perks! Tiers start at just $2! Go to JimJefferies.com to buy tickets to Jim's upcoming tour, The Moist Tour. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Constant Wonder
Sea Connections Everywhere, with Craig Foster, Sy Montgomery, Helen Scales, and Luke Harris

Constant Wonder

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 52:50


Mollusks cultivate underwater gardens, cuttlefish become invisible, and tiny fish run spas for predators. Meanwhile, some ingenious humans work to protect the underwater world that most of us rarely see. Photograph from UNDERWATER WILD by Craig Foster and Ross Frylinck. Copyright © 2018, 2021 by Quivertree Publications. Reprinted by permission of Mariner Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers LLC. All rights reserved.

Reading the End
Episode 154 - 2021 in Review

Reading the End

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2022 59:50


The Jennys chat about their year in reading and then spend thirty entire minutes on FISH FACTS from Helen Scales's The Brilliant Abyss.

Kathy Sullivan Explores
The Joyous Wonder of the Ocean with Helen Scales

Kathy Sullivan Explores

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2022 81:10


Helen Scales is a British marine biologist, writer, and broadcaster. Her passion for underwater exploration started when she learned to scuba dive as part of the Duke of Edinburgh's Award program. Throughout her illustrious career, she has worked with the World Wide Fund for Nature, TRAFFIC International, and Natural England. Helen is also the author of The Brilliant Abyss: Exploring the Majestic Hidden Life of the Deep Ocean, and the Looming Threat That Imperils It, which explores the majesty and mystery of an underwater world few are privileged to see. Helen joins me today to discuss her passion for ocean exploration and the inspiration behind her books. She shares how being in love with the ocean shaped her hobbies and career interests. You'll hear about the dives she did in various tropical countries and the marine conservation programs she and her team helped fund along the way. She explains her concern about marine wildlife welfare and why people should take marine conservation seriously. You'll also gain insight on Helen's thoughts on deep diving and books she has planned in the future. "What I would love to see is more people celebrating the joyous wonder of the ocean and what lives there—not how we can conquer it or make money out of it." - Helen Scales This week on Kathy Sullivan Explores: Where Helen's passion for sea exploration started Collecting shells, painting them, and other ocean-related hobbies Marine-related careers that run in Helen's family The rise of green awareness in the '90s How to earn the Duke of Edinburgh's Award Helen's personal rating of her writing skills Doing dives in Belize and other countries, finishing her PhD, and helping kids along the way Exploring tropical countries and helping them refine their tourism programs Helen's first encounter with a seahorse Helen's thoughts on the lack of marine conservation awareness Why Helen looks forward to blackwater diving Deep diving in the abyss and overcoming claustrophobia Helen answers lightning round questions The one thing Helen wants people to know about the ocean The books Helen intends to write in the future Connect with Helen Scales: Helen Scales Official Website Book: The Brilliant Abyss: Exploring the Majestic Hidden Life of the Deep Ocean, and the Looming Threat That Imperils It Book: The Great Barrier Reef Helen Scales on Instagram Helen Scales on Twitter Spaceship Not Required I'm Kathy Sullivan, the only person to have walked in space and gone to the deepest point in the ocean. I'm an explorer, and that doesn't always have to involve going to some remote or exotic place. It simply requires a commitment to put curiosity into action. In this podcast, you can explore, reflecting on lessons learned from life so far and from my brilliant and ever-inquisitive guests. We explore together in this very moment from right where you are--spaceship not required. Welcome to Kathy Sullivan Explores. Visit my website atkathysullivanexplores.com to sign up for seven astronaut tips to improving your life on earth and be the first to discover future episodes and learn about more exciting adventures ahead! Don't forget to leave a rating and review wherever you get your podcasts! Spotify IStitcher IApple Podcasts I iHeart Radio ITuneIn IGoogle IAmazon Music. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Kathy Sullivan Explores
The Joyous Wonder of the Ocean with Helen Scales

Kathy Sullivan Explores

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2022 81:10


Helen Scales is a British marine biologist, writer, and broadcaster. Her passion for underwater exploration started when she learned to scuba dive as part of the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award program. Throughout her illustrious career, she has worked wi

Nature newbies
Ep 11 - Why do snails come out in the wet?

Nature newbies

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2021 26:05


Why are there always tons of snails and slugs around when it's rainy? Find out with me in this episode which covers the wide world of molluscs (watch out for those teeth!), and nature wows covering farming ants and goldfinch paintings.    Resource: Spirals in time: The secret life and curious afterlife of seashells, by Helen Scales. 

The Book Review
Life at Seven Miles Below the Sea

The Book Review

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2021 55:15


In her new book, “The Brilliant Abyss,” Helen Scales writes about the largely unseen realm of the deepest parts of the ocean. On this week's podcast, she talks about the life down there — and how long it took us to realize there was any at all.“It wasn't so long ago, maybe 200 years ago, that most people — scientists, the brightest minds we had — assumed that life only went down as far as sunlight reaches, so the first 600 feet or so,” Scales says. “But what's so fascinating is that life does go all the way to the very, very bottom; down to seven miles, which is the deepest point, just about. And there are ways in which life has found adaptations to all of these crazy, extreme conditions in the deep, and that's what we're really doing a lot of the time, as marine biologists working in the deepest, is finding that stuff and asking the question: ‘How are you here?'”Rebecca Donner visits the podcast to discuss her new book, “All the Frequent Troubles of Our Days,” which recounts the story of Mildred Harnack, Donner's great-great-aunt, an American woman executed in 1943 for being a member of the German resistance to the Nazis during World War II.“She most definitely saw herself as a resistance fighter, and she certainly did not see herself as a spy,” Donner says. “She engaged in acts of espionage in order to undermine the Nazi regime, but she never met with a control officer, she never accepted money. She worked in an unofficial capacity.”Also on this week's episode, Tina Jordan looks back at Book Review history as it celebrates its 125th anniversary; Elizabeth Harris has news from the publishing world; and Gal Beckerman and John Williams talk about what they're reading. Pamela Paul is the host.Here are the books discussed in this week's “What We're Reading”:“Four Thousand Weeks” by Oliver Burkeman“Ghettoside” by Jill Leovy“Last Best Hope” by George Packer

Read Science!
S14:E05, “The Brilliant Abyss” edition, with Helen Scales (audio)

Read Science!

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2021


Recorded on 1 July for release on 6 July 2021. Joanne and Jeff talked with marine biologist & author Helen Scales about her new book, The Brilliant Abyss : Exploring the Majestic Hidden Life of the Deep Ocean and the Looming Threat that Imperils It. Like “Read Science!” on Facebook to hear about upcoming programs, […]

Radio Times
The deep ocean, climate change and hurricanes

Radio Times

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2021 49:00


Marine biologist Helen Scales on the deep ocean and its strange and wondrous inhabitants and the threat climate change, pollution and deep sea-mining pose.

FUTURES Podcast
Exploring the Deep Sea w/ Helen Scales

FUTURES Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2021 66:53


Marine biologist Helen Scales shares her insights into the vital role that the ocean plays in sustaining life on earth, the innovative new technologies humans are using to explore the seabed, and how a rich diversity of deep sea creatures might hold the key to new scientific advances. Helen Scales is a marine biologist, diver, surfer, broadcaster and writer who's spent hundreds of hours underwater watching fish. A familiar voice for the oceans, she's pondered the mysteries of the deep sea with Robin Ince and Brian Cox on BBC Radio 4's The Infinite Monkey Cage and donated an imaginary tank of seahorses to The Museum of Curiosity. She's a regular writer for BBC Focus and BBC Wildlife magazines. Among her radio documentaries she's explored the dream of living underwater and followed the trail of endangered snails around the world and back again. Find out more: futurespodcast.net CREDITS Produced by FUTURES Podcast Recorded, Mixed & Edited by Luke Robert Mason FOLLOW Twitter: twitter.com/futurespodcast Facebook: facebook.com/futurespodcast Instagram: instagram.com/futurespodcast

Intimacy with the world
How the oceans make life on earth possible and the secrets of the deep abyss, with Helen Scales

Intimacy with the world

Play Episode Listen Later May 27, 2021 64:43


Marine biologist Helen Scales passion for the ocean, all its creatures and its whole otherworldliness is truly fascinating - it shows us how to keep intact our curiosity, our awe and our respect for all life and all places, also the ones we cannot see. Why did she become a marine biologist - a nature-kid with a tiny little stone cottage by the sea in Cornwall The sensation of breathing under water - the closest she could get to being a fish, and the first time she saw a fish under water The sensation of putting herself into an other world - wanting to se what is in the hidden worlds And how when you are really paying attention, you can see the most wondrous really small creatures The ocean is a huge mass of life, and all that life is interdependently connected How the ocean pulls out half of all the carbon dioxide that the planet pulls down How the ocean feeds the earth, and vice versa. How we can so easily disrupt these networks. And how changing one thing, has consequences for other things how the ocean absorbs both excess heat and CO2, and how that co2 absorption creates ocean acidity The coral reefs are both being impacted by the heating of the ocean and the acidity 1/4 of all the life in the ocean lives around coral reefs We speak about the deep sea coral reefs growing on seamounts How the Greenland shark lives for 500 years How we need each other to survive Where does one life begin and another one begin, when many living beings live in such deep symbiosis How life goes absolutely everywhere, and just adapt Chemo-synthesis on hydrothermal vents, full of toxic chemicals, and lots of animals are adapted to that environment How chemo-synthesis is a wholly different kind of all life than life as we know it, which is dependent on photosynthesis. deep sea mining for our green revolution like electric car batteries The paradigm of just keep extracting from the earth, without giving back Thinking about regeneration There is an increasing interest in nature and our connection to nature Important to start individually to make changes What kind of world do we want to live in? Can we make the mental shift and keep exploring the world, but not having to extract what we find. We talk about the possibility of life on other planets NASA is looking closely at life in the deep oceans How life on the planet perhaps started in the deep oceans What is life actually, and how energy needs to be generated for life to arise www.helenscales.com www.duritaholm.com

The Life Scientific
Helen Scales on marine conservation

The Life Scientific

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2021 34:23


Luminescent bone-eating worms, giant squid and a sea cucumber commonly known as the headless chicken monster: some extraordinary creatures live at the bottom of the sea. For a long time almost everyone agreed the pressure was too intense for any life to exist. Now, it seems, the more we look the more new species we find. But, many fear, marine life would be threatened if plans to extract precious metals from the potato-sized metallic nodules that grow on the seabed are allowed to go ahead. Metals such as copper, manganese and cobalt are in high demand in the manufacture of mobile phones and renewable energy technologies, such as batteries for electric cars, wind turbines and solar panels. Deep sea mining companies argue that we will need these metals to create a carbon Net Zero economy. Meantime, the World Wildlife Fund is pushing for a moratorium on deep sea mining. And several companies agree: including Google, BMW, Volvo and Samsung. Do we need to choose between green and blue? Or is there a third way that protects both the planet and all the riches in our oceans? Marine biologist, Helen Scales talks to Jim Al-Khalili about her life and work: fish watching off an atoll in the South China Sea to assess the extinction risks to the Humphead Wrasse and a research expedition to explore the brilliant abyss. And she warns of the environmental devastation that could be caused if plans to mine the metals on the bottom of the ocean were to be allowed to go ahead. Producer: Anna Buckley

Little Atoms
Little Atoms 692 - Helen Scales' The Brilliant Abyss

Little Atoms

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2021 29:50


Helen Scales returns to Little Atoms and talks to Neil about exploring the deep oceans, how creatures survive the great depths, and how human activity threatens even the deepest places in her new book The Brilliant Abyss. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Science Shambles
Helen Scales and Hugh Warwick - Live Sunday Q and A

Science Shambles

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2021 70:24


Hosted by Robin Ince and Dr Helen Czerski this episode of the Science Shambles podcast is an audio recording of our weekly Sunday Science Q and A show that goes out at 3pm BST on our YouTube channel. This week Robin and Helen are joined by Dr Helen Scales and Hugh Warwick to talk of deep sea creatures, hedgehogs and rainbows... Watch them on our YouTube channel at youtube.com/cosmicshambles and get bonus content and extended conversations with guests by subscribing at patreon.com/cosmicshambles

CSaP: The Science & Policy Podcast
Science & Policy for Deep Oceans, Space, and Antarctica: Conservation

CSaP: The Science & Policy Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2021 33:24


In the fourth episode of our series on Science and Policy for Antarctica, Space, and the Deep Ocean, we're exploring conservation efforts in Antarctica and the deep oceans. Throughout today's episode, host Dr Rob Doubleday is joined by CSaP Policy Intern Alice Millington, marine biologist and author Dr Helen Scales, and marine ornithologist Dr Lucy Quinn. Our expert guests discuss topics including deep sea fishing, the Antarctic Treaty, and albatrosses. -- CSaP: The Science & Policy Podcast is hosted by CSaP Executive Director Dr Rob Doubleday, and is edited and produced by CSaP Communications Coordinator Kate McNeil. Research for this series is also supported by CSaP Policy Interns Alice Millington and Anthony Lindley. Music and sound effects used in this season of CSaP: The Science & Policy Podcast are courtesy of FreeSound.org. This episode features sound effects from PannChie and smacks999.

Primordial Radio Podcast
*PREVIEW* The Sea Word with The Blowfish - EP25 (Dr. Helen Scales)

Primordial Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2021 9:50


The full podcast is available exclusively for Primordial Radio members via https://primordialradio.com/sea-word/ or the Primordial Radio app. The world's only heavy metal marine biologist - The Blowfish - is back with another episode of The Sea Word Podcast. This time round, instead of talking about an incredible animal, he's talking to an incredible person; marine biologist, writer, and broadcaster Dr. Helen Scales. *CAUTION* Contains much fish-related geekery! If like us you're sick of double glazing ads and the same songs on repeat OVER & OVER then come join the evolution of rock & metal radio for FREE for 30 days @ http://primordialradio.com

blowfish helen scales caution contains over over primordial radio
Catch Our Drift
Survival

Catch Our Drift

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2021 41:06


In the very first episode of Catch Our Drift podcast Helen Scales and Oliver Steeds will be bringing you amazing stories of survival – survival at sea but also survival of our sea. We are joined by Chris Lemons, who got about as close to oblivion at the bottom of the ocean as is humanly possible, author Ian Urbina who has some shocking stories of human slavery and survival at sea and Umbrella Academy's Robert Sheehan sings a hearty sea shanty with Devon's Mariner's Away.

A Beautiful World
Eye Of The Shoal

A Beautiful World

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2018 4:04


The vast variety of creatures living underwater makes us wonder – is there really such a thing as a fish – or just thousands of animals that are excellent at swimming? Helen Scales, 41, Marine Biologist, investigates the citizens of the sea in her newest book, EYE of the SHOAL: The fishwatcher's guide to life, the ocean and everything. More at: https://www.abeautiful.world/stories/theres-no-such-thing-as-a-fish/

Discovery
Inside the Shark's Mind

Discovery

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2014 26:59


Fatal shark attacks on humans have been on the increase in Australia. For Discovery, marine biologist Dr Helen Scales finds out how scientists are exploring new, humane ways to reduce this number. At the start of this year, the state government of Western Australia decided to undertake the culling of sharks longer than three metres, after what they called an “unprecedented number of attacks”. In February, thousands of Australians protested against the cull, with conservationists claiming that it will make no difference to the number of attacks. An outspoken critic of the strategy is Rodney Fox, who was almost killed by a Great White shark when he was a young man but who subsequently made a 50-year-long career filming sharks, shark tourism and shark conservation. Rodney talks to Helen about the day he was attacked and his thoughts about the Western Australian cull. Rodney argues that another approach is needed.On a mission to reduce shark attacks, a team has been formed at the Ocean Institute, University of Western Australia (UWA). Their task is to think like a shark to understand how a shark's brain perceives and reacts to light, sound and vibrations, and how the shark's finely tuned senses might be manipulated in the hunt for more effective, humanitarian shark repellents. Research revealed that Great Whites have large chunks of their brain dedicated to vision. So UWA are developing and testing a shark-proof wetsuit that mimics the appearance of poisonous, striped sea snakes. Other solutions under study include bubble curtains and the use of devices which generate electric fields around swimmers.Helen also questions whether sharks deserve their reputation as the most fearsome predators of the sea. Have they been misunderstood and mythologised by popular culture through films such as Jaws and Deep Blue Sea. Proving that even the most predatory of sharks are not automatic man-eaters, Helen herself goes diving with dozens of huge bull sharks (one of the most aggressive species) and comes to the surface unscathed. These three metre long monsters have been trained to be hand-fed by locals while tourists watch close by. Helen also talks to veteran shark researcher Eugenie Clark about the predators' learning abilities and intelligence. Dr Clark was able to train sharks to learn to press the correct buttons with their snouts to get a food treat. She even presented the Crown Prince of Japan with a baby nurse shark who never made a mistake.(Photo: Courtesy of Helen Scales)