• Skip to main content

People Behind the Science Podcast

Science Podcast - Journey through the minds of today's brilliant scientists

  • About
    • About
    • Contact
  • Scientists
  • Resources
  • Podcasts
    • Podcasts
    • Special Episodes
  • Support

Podcast Episode

670: Dr. Lee Cronin: Chemistry is Key: Studying Self Assembly and the Origins of Life

August 22, 2022 By PBtS Leave a Comment

Listen to the Episode Below (00:45:44)
0.75x
1x
1.25x
1.5x
2x
  • 670: Dr. Lee Cronin: Chemistry is Key: Studying Self Assembly and the Origins of Life
0:00
00:45:44
  • 670: Dr. Lee Cronin: Chemistry is Key: Studying Self Assembly and the Origins of Life
Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyPlayer EmbedShare
Leave a ReviewListen in a New WindowDownloadSoundCloudStitcherSubscribe on AndroidSubscribe via RSS

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS

Listen Free in iTunes

Listen Free on Stitcher Radio

Dr. Lee Cronin is the Regius Professor of Chemistry at the University of Glasgow. He received his Bsc in Pure Chemistry with First Class Honors as well as his PhD in Inorganic Chemistry from York University. Afterward, he served as a Research Fellow at the University of Edinburgh, an Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellow, and a Lecturer at the University of Birmingham before joining the faculty at Glasgow University where he is today. Lee is an accomplished chemist who has been honored with many awards including recognition as one of the United Kingdom’s top 10 Inspiring Scientists and Engineers by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council in 2014 and one of the top 100 United Kingdom practicing Scientists by the UK Science Council. He received the Royal Society of Chemistry’s Corday Morgan Medal and Prize in 2012 and Tilden Prize for pure research in 2015. In addition, Lee is a member of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and recipient of the Royal Society’s 2013 BP Hutton Prize for Energy Innovation for applied research. In our interview, Lee shares stories about his life and science.

[Read more…] about 670: Dr. Lee Cronin: Chemistry is Key: Studying Self Assembly and the Origins of Life

Filed Under: Podcast Episode

669: Dr. Emily Darling: Conducting Research to Conserve Coral Reefs

August 15, 2022 By PBtS Leave a Comment

Listen to the Episode Below (00:48:28)
0.75x
1x
1.25x
1.5x
2x
  • 669: Dr. Emily Darling: Conducting Research to Conserve Coral Reefs
0:00
00:48:28
  • 669: Dr. Emily Darling: Conducting Research to Conserve Coral Reefs
Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyPlayer EmbedShare
Leave a ReviewListen in a New WindowDownloadSoundCloudStitcherSubscribe on AndroidSubscribe via RSS

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS

Listen Free in iTunes

Listen Free on Stitcher Radio

Dr. Emily Darling is Director of Coral Reef Conservation at the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Toronto. Emily received her B.Sc. Degree in Biology from Queen’s University and her PhD in Marine Ecology and Conservation from Simon Fraser University. Afterwards, she was awarded the David H. Smith Conservation Research Fellowship to conduct postdoctoral research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Subsequently, Emily was awarded a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship to work at the University of Toronto. Emily has been awarded the Early Career Scientist Award from the International Coral Reef Society and the Early Career Award from the Canadian Society for Ecology and Evolution. In this interview, Emily shares more about her life and science.

[Read more…] about 669: Dr. Emily Darling: Conducting Research to Conserve Coral Reefs

Filed Under: Podcast Episode

668: Dr. Gail Ashley: Searching the Sediments to Uncover Sources of Food and Water for Early Humans

August 8, 2022 By PBtS Leave a Comment

Listen to the Episode Below (00:44:36)
0.75x
1x
1.25x
1.5x
2x
  • 668: Dr. Gail Ashley: Searching the Sediments to Uncover Sources of Food and Water for Early Humans
0:00
00:44:36
  • 668: Dr. Gail Ashley: Searching the Sediments to Uncover Sources of Food and Water for Early Humans
Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyPlayer EmbedShare
Leave a ReviewListen in a New WindowDownloadSoundCloudStitcherSubscribe on AndroidSubscribe via RSS

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS

Listen Free in iTunes 

Listen Free on Stitcher Radio

Dr. Gail Ashley is a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Rutgers University. She is Undergraduate Program Director and Director of the Quaternary Studies Graduate Certificate Program. She received her B.S. and M.S. degrees in Geology from the University of Massachusetts and completed her Ph.D. at the University of British Columbia. After receiving her Ph.D., Gail accepted a faculty position at Rutgers, and she has been a faculty member there for 39 years. Gail has received many awards and honors during her career including the Sedimentary Geology Division of the Geological Society of America’s Laurence L. Sloss award for her lifetime achievements in sedimentary geology, as well as an Outstanding teaching award from the Association of Women Geoscientists. She has also served as President of the Society for Sedimentary Geologists, President of the Geological Society of America, President of the Society of Economic and Petroleum Mineralogists, and President of the American Geosciences Institute. In addition, Gail has served as Editor-in Chief of the Journal of Sedimentary Research. In our interview, Gail tells us more about her journey through life and science.

[Read more…] about 668: Dr. Gail Ashley: Searching the Sediments to Uncover Sources of Food and Water for Early Humans

Filed Under: Podcast Episode

667: Dr. James Cahill: Roving Roots! Plants Behave More Like Animals than We May Realize

August 1, 2022 By PBtS Leave a Comment

Listen to the Episode Below (00:40:38)
0.75x
1x
1.25x
1.5x
2x
  • 667: Dr. James Cahill: Roving Roots! Plants Behave More Like Animals than We May Realize
0:00
00:40:38
  • 667: Dr. James Cahill: Roving Roots! Plants Behave More Like Animals than We May Realize
Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyPlayer EmbedShare
Leave a ReviewListen in a New WindowDownloadSoundCloudStitcherSubscribe on AndroidSubscribe via RSS

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS

Listen Free in iTunes

Listen Free on Stitcher Radio

Dr. James (JC) Cahill is a Professor of Ecology in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Alberta. He received his PhD in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology from the University of Pennsylvania. Afterward, he served briefly as a Visiting Assistant Professor at Ursinus College and then on the faculty at the University of Delaware before joining the faculty at the University of Alberta where he has been for about 15 years. In this interview, JC shares more about his life and his science.

[Read more…] about 667: Dr. James Cahill: Roving Roots! Plants Behave More Like Animals than We May Realize

Filed Under: Podcast Episode

666: Dr. Mita Dasog: Developing Nanomaterials to Help Solve Global Energy, Fuel, and Fresh Water Issues

July 25, 2022 By PBtS Leave a Comment

Listen to the Episode Below (00:38:43)
0.75x
1x
1.25x
1.5x
2x
  • 666: Dr. Mita Dasog: Developing Nanomaterials to Help Solve Global Energy, Fuel, and Fresh Water Issues
0:00
00:38:43
  • 666: Dr. Mita Dasog: Developing Nanomaterials to Help Solve Global Energy, Fuel, and Fresh Water Issues
Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyPlayer EmbedShare
Leave a ReviewListen in a New WindowDownloadSoundCloudStitcherSubscribe on AndroidSubscribe via RSS

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | RSS

Listen Free in iTunes

Listen Free on Stitcher Radio

Dr. Mita Dasog is an Associate Professor and the Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Research Chair in the Department of Chemistry at Dalhousie University in Canada. She received her BSc in chemistry from the University of Saskatchewan and her PhD in chemistry from the University of Alberta. Next, she worked at the Technical University of Munich in Germany for about half a year as a Green Talents Visiting Scholar. Afterwards, Mita was awarded a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada postdoctoral fellowship to conduct research at California Institute of Technology. Mita has been recognized with numerous awards and honors including the Nova Scotia Discovery Centre Emerging Professional Award and the President’s Emerging Investigator Research Excellence Award. She is also an elected Member of the College of the Royal Society of Canada and a Member of the Global Young Academy. In our interview, Mita shares more about her life and science.

[Read more…] about 666: Dr. Mita Dasog: Developing Nanomaterials to Help Solve Global Energy, Fuel, and Fresh Water Issues

Filed Under: Podcast Episode

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 29
  • Page 30
  • Page 31
  • Page 32
  • Page 33
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 164
  • Go to Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 People Behind the Science · www.peoplebehindthescience.com