Navigation for News Categories
Our Changing World headlines with summaries.
-
Maximising our children's potential
What sorts of hopes and dreams do parents have for their children, and do all Kiwi kids have the same opportunities to maximise their potential.
Audio -
Quantum mechanics - do deep-sea bacteria do it?
26 Jan 2017Quantum mechanics describes how our universe behaves at an atomic level. It involves waves and particles, and deep-sea bacteria use it to harvest light very efficiently.
Audio -
Winners or losers? Antarctic starfish and climate change
26 Jan 2017Warming temperatures and increasing ocean acidity are looming climate change threats in Antarctica - and scientists are looking at their effect on Antarctic starfish.
Audio -
Flicking the switch for electric cars
28 Apr 2016A switch to electric transport could go a long way towards reducing New Zealand's greenhouse gas emissions. Veronika Meduna takes a road trip with other electric car owners.
Audio -
Pharmac and its role in making drugs available
Science communication student Garrett Chin talks with doctors and a health economist about the challenges that Pharmac faces in buying drugs, and what happens when new but expensvie drugs become…
Audio -
Museums and their role in modern society
16 Jan 2017Emma Hanisch, a student at the University of Otago, loves museums - and she wonders what needs to be done to keep them relevant and exciting.
Audio -
Did early Polynesians sail to the Americas?
Science communications student Ellen Rykers ponders the Polynesians and their journeys around the Pacific, wondering where they might have got to.
Audio -
Hedgehogs – good or bad?
9 Jan 2017Hedgehogs are cute - but they're also deadly killers. Science communication student Harriet Ampt is investigating.
Audio -
Uplifted - marine life on the Kaikōura coast after the quake
22 Dec 2016The Kaikōura Peninsula was uplifted 1 metre during the magnitude 7.8 earthquake - and marine life on the rocky shore was left high and dry.
Audio -
Surviving life on the outside
15 Dec 2016Sonia Sly finds out about a psychological programme to help offenders better adjust to living in the community when they are released from prison.
Audio -
From wine waste to safer food packaging
University of Auckland researchers are using tannin-rich wine waste to create safer food packaging that has antibacterial properties.
Audio -
Climathon - new ideas to deal with climate change
8 Dec 2016Take a hundred people motivated to do something about climate change, give them 24 hours to brainstorm ideas about practical solutions, do that around the world and you have a Climathon.
Audio -
When the Kekerengu Fault ruptured
8 Dec 2016Geologists are combing the ground in the wake of the 7.8M Kaikōura earthquake looking for clues, to understand what happened when 9 faults rupture at the same time.
Audio -
Giant underwater landslide in the Kaikōura Canyon
1 Dec 2016The magnitude 7.8 Kaikōura earthquake triggered a massive underwater landslide that swept down the offshore canyon system and was still flowing more than 300 km away.
Audio -
When orchids smell like mushrooms - a tale of botanical deceit
1 Dec 2016Spider orchids that smell like mushrooms are fooling fungus gnats into pollinating them, and Carlos Lehnebach wants to find out more about this botanical deception.
Video, Audio -
Science winners - 2016 Research Honours
24 Nov 2016The 2016 Research Honours have been awarded and we talk to the 2016 winners of the Rutherford, Macdiarmid and Callaghan medals.
Audio -
Mena the penguin-detector dog
24 Nov 2016Alastair Judkins is a penguin hunter - and his secret weapon is a 'super nose', a dog called Mena. Alison Ballance joins them on a little penguin search in Wellington.
Audio -
The Science Of... Snow
15 Nov 2016What is snow? How and where is it made? Why is it white? Alison Ballance and Katy Gosset head to Mt Ruapehu in search of the answers to all your questions about snow.
Audio -
The Science Of... Meth Houses
How safe are meth houses really? And what's it like to go inside? Katy Gosset and Alison Ballance take the plunge and ask how much meth is too much when it comes to setting a national standard?
Audio -
Tour de Science
3 Nov 2016David Klein is taking his award-winning one-man science show on tour, by bicycle, around small town community halls.
Audio -
A Community Cockle Count
8 May 2014The eighth Pauatahanui Cockle Count involved more than a hundred locals digging and sieving for cockles in the intertidal.
Audio -
Rowi - the Rarest Kiwi
24 Apr 2014Rowi are New Zealand's rarest kiwi, and 'egg rescues' that see chicks hatched and raised in captivity have resulted in a big increase in the bird's numbers
Audio -
Joan Wiffen and her Dinosaurs
19 Jun 2014A tribute to Joan Wiffen, a self-taught palaeontologist who discovered New Zealand's first dinosaur bone in a Hawke's Bay streambed in the 1970s.
Audio -
Rutherford's Den Restoration
9 Oct 2014A rare glimpse of how Rutherford's Den and Christchurch's iconic Arts Centre are being restored after the earthquakes
Audio
Top News stories
- Multiple dead in Manawatū house fire that closed section of State Highway One
- Will I have to pay tax if I give my kids $150k? - Ask Susan
- Two more yellow-legged hornet queens found in Aukland's Glenfield brings total to nine
- Carnage at Cup Week as violent thunderstorm hits Canterbury
- Donald Trump says he will 'likely' sue BBC for up to US$5b over edited Capitol speech