Categories: Factual: , Available now
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2010: Space Odyssey to Europa
Astronomer Paul Murdin asks if Jupiter's moon, Europa, might sustain biological life.
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3D Bioprinting
Howard Stableford investigates whether advances in 3D printing can benefit nature.
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5 live Science
Naked Scientists Chris Smith and Kat Arney with science news stories and analysis
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A Brief History of Mathematics
Professor Marcus du Sautoy reveals the personalities behind the calculations
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A Guide to Coastal Wildlife
Brett Westwood and Phil Gates present a guide to some of Britain's coastal wildlife.
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A Guide to Farmland Birds
How to recognise birds of the British countryside from their appearance, calls and songs
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A Guide to Garden Wildlife
Brett Westwood and Phil Gates present a guide to some of Britain's common garden wildlife
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A Guide to Mountain and Moorland Birds
Brett Westwood and Stephen Moss offer a guide to Britain's upland birds
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A History of the Brain
Dr Geoff Bunn journeys through 5,000 years of human understanding of the brain
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A View Through a Lens
Wildlife cameraman John Aitchison on human experience and the beauty of nature
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Africalab
Hugh Levinson asks whether science and technology can end under-development in Africa
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An Eye for Pattern: The Letters of Dorothy Hodgkin
A portrait of Dorothy Hodgkin, the only female British scientist to win a Nobel Prize.
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An Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth
The writer Tom Dyckhoff looks at the life and work of Richard Buckminster Fuller.
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Andy Cave's Expedition Underground
Mountaineer Andy Cave joins the team working on the Thirlmere Aqueduct.
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Aping Evolution
Prof Steve Jones takes a sceptical look at the new science of evolutionary psychology
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Balach à Borghastan
Sgeulachd-beatha Dhòmhnaill Chaluim MhicArtair fear-saidheans à Leòdhas.
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Batman and the Barbies
Felicity Finch joins conservationist Tim Dixon in search of the very rare Barbestelle bats
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BBC Inside Science
Adam Rutherford goes inside science to explore the research that is transforming our world
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Between the Tides
An exciting and revelatory soundscape following life between the tides on a sandy coast.
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Big Bang Day: Engineering Solutions
Adam Hart-Davis follows the construction of the Large Hadron Collider atom smasher at CERN
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Big Bang Day: Five Particles
Simon Singh examines the significance of subatomic particles
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Big Bang Day: The Making of CERN
Quentin Cooper explores the history of CERN, the European particle physics laboratory
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Big Game Theory
If trophy hunting is banned in Africa, would lions be more or less at risk?
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Big Game, Little Game
Mark Stephen charts a job swap between gamekeepers from the Kalahari and the Angus Glens
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Biomimicry: Inspired by Nature
Scientist and broadcaster Prof Trevor Cox explores a new wave of biomimicry.
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Bitten by the Bug
Brett Westwood explores the UK's natural history societies
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Bragg on the Braggs
Melvyn Bragg tells the story of the Nobel-winning physicists William and Lawrence Bragg.
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Brain Culture: Neuroscience and Society
Matthew Taylor explores the coming 'Brain Culture'
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Bridging the Morphine Gap
Mukti Jain Campion asks why India's people have virtually no access to medical morphine.
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Britain's Atlantis
The most recent knowledge of what the land around Britain was like before the Ice Age.
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Britain's Sputnik
Roland Pease recalls ZETA, a nuclear energy project unveiled in 1958 by British scientists
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Byd Amaeth
Y diweddaraf o'r byd ffermio gyda Dei Tomos. The latest farming news with Dei Tomos
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Cells and Celluloid: A Science and Cinema Special
Adam Rutherford and Francine Stock explore the relationship between film and science.
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Changing Climate
Roger Harrabin examines the science, politics and solutions of climate.
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Chips With Everything
Sue Nelson investigates the humble source of the silicon chip.
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City Limits
Two-part series looking at the fringes where suburbia meets the countryside
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Click On
Simon Cox with the latest developments and issues from the world of IT.
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Codes that Changed the World
Aleks Krotoski tells the story of the languages that have been used to talk to machines.
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Computing Britain
Hannah Fry reveals the UK's lead role in developing computer technologies we rely on today
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Costing the Earth
Programme looking at man's effect on the environment and how the environment reacts
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Country Focus
Programme serving everyone living in the countryside, and tackling issues affecting them
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Crafty Orchids
Why are orchids so popular? Jim Endersby offers a new scientific history of their allure.
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Creative Genius
Ian Peacock unravels the myth, science and psychology behind creativity.