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The Skeptics' Guide To The Universe - Podcast 304 - 5/9/2011
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The Skeptics' Guide To The Universe
The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe is produced by SGU Productions, LLC - dedicated to promoting critical thinking, reason, and the public understanding of science through online and other media. The first episode of the SGU podcast went online on May 4th, 2005. It soon became a popular science/skeptical podcast, and remains one of the most popular science podcasts on iTunes.
SGU Podcasting Awards: SGU on XM: You can listen to the SGU on America's Talk XM 166 every Saturday night from 8-9pm Eastern.
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Podcast
304
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May 09, 2011
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Interview with Jon Ronson This Week in Skepticism News Items: Einstein Right Again, Mark Geier's License Suspended, Moon Microbe Mystery, Steytlerville Monster Who's That Noisy Your Questions and E-mails: Yap Money Science or Fiction
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Segment: This Day in Skepticism
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May 14th, 1796
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English physician Edward Jenner administered the first vaccination against smallpox to an eight-year-old boy.
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Segment: News Items
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Segment: Who's That Noisy
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Who's That Noisy
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Answer to last week: Quote from Close Encounters of the Third Kind
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Segment: Questions and Emails
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Yap Money
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During your segment on the Easter Island civilization, Rebecca mentioned an island that uses giant stone things as currency. What she was remembering is the Island of Yap, a Pacific island that uses giant limestone disks as money. Many of the stone disks are so big (up to 4 or 5 metric tons) that no one person could move them on their own, so they trade them as currency without moving them--just sort of pointing to the stone in your neighbor's yard and saying, yeah, that one's mine.
What's even crazier is that the stones come from another island, Palau, which is several hundred miles away, and had to be brought over on rafts and canoes.
All this information is from a show that NPR's Planet Money did on the subject. (This means that someone else has probably told you this already, but nonetheless I thought I'd chime in.)
It's their podcast #235, and it's highly amusing. I hope it's also factual.
It was great to meet you all at NECSS. Thanks as ever for the great show.
Hai-Ting
New York, NY
http://www.scopesmonkeychoir.com
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Segment: Interview
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Interview with Jon Ronson
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Author of The Men Who Stare at Goats, and now The Psychopath Test
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Segment: Science or Fiction [ Click Here to Show the Answers ]
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Item #1 Science
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The first solid state amplifier (transistor) was made of germanium, which dominated the transistor industry from 1947 into the 1960s, until it was ultimately replaced by the silicon transistor.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanium
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Item #2 Science
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Marie and Pierre Curie had a daughter, Irene Joliot-Curie, who also won a Nobel prize jointly with her husband for work with radiation, and (like her mother) died prematurely of radiation-induced leukemia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ir%C3%A8ne_Joliot-Curie
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Item #3 Fiction
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Mercury is the only element that is a liquid at room temperature.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bromine
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Item #4 Science
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For over 60 years in the 1800s aluminum was considered a precious metal, worth more than gold, despite being the most common metal in the Earth's crust.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aluminium
Note: All four items derive from the book, The Disappearing Spoon by Sam Kean
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Segment: Skeptical Quote of the Week
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Skeptical Quote of the Week
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"Homeopathy is the idea that we just cured the world of terrorism by dumping Osama's corpse in the ocean."
- Sean Mcfly
"I believed in reincarnation in my last life but I'm not to sure about it in this one."
- Stephanie Beach
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