This is an article on nature, and it's also like a little bit of a biography of a mammoth that lived 17 thousand years ago. The reason this mammoth is now one of my favourite mammoths is because they had a tusk from this creature which was known and which had previously been analyzed. They've named kick, kick the mammoth. Well, that's amazing. What's it been doig wha, do we know about this mammoth, and how is this a biography? And then finally, the last few ears from the most recent bas bits of the tusk show that he died of starvation. That's uite, quite a quarte, a sad endory.
A team is creating bespoke words for scientific terms in African languages, and the sustainability of the electric car boom.
00:46 Creating new words for scientific terms
Many words that are common to science have never been written in some African languages, or speakers struggle to agree what the right term is. Now a new project aims to change that, by translating 180 research papers into six languages spoken by millions of people across the continent of Africa.
As electric cars become more ubiquitous, manufacturers will have to up the production of batteries needed to power them. But that begs the question - can they be mass produced in a sustainable way?
We discuss some highlights from the Nature Briefing. This time, how a tusk-based ‘chemical GPS’ revealed details of a mammoth’s enormous journeys , and why the Perseverance rover’s first efforts to collect a Mars rock sample didn’t go according to plan.