
Bedrock: Earth's Earliest History
74 episodes — Page 2 of 2

The Oldest Rocks In: Africa
Miniseries Episode 3: Africa is a continent with many different nations and rocks. Today, we learn how most of Africa was fused together billions of years ago, and which pockets preserve the best evidence for ancient life (South Africa, Zimbabwe). Along the way, we'll meet the richest human in history, a giant knife made from magma, and a two-billion-year family reunion.

Update: Bedrock will return in January 2023!
Thank you all for your patience these few months as I've started a new professor position in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Moving and preparing my first classes took all of my time and mental energy, but now I'm at a place where I can make episodes again! I'm excited to continue the story and I hope you are as well.More details are in the episode but in short: Oldest Rocks mini-series: 5 weekly episodes starting January 2, 2023.Topics: Africa, South America, Asia, Europe, North America. The Main Plot: bi-weekly episodes starting in February 2023, Topics: Finishing the Hadean 4.5 - 4 billion years ago (January on the Earth Calendar)The origins of life(!) and Earth's earliest atmosphere

The Oldest Rocks In: Australia
Miniseries Episode 2: Australia is one of the top destinations for people who love the ancient Earth. Today, we take a brief tour around the three oldest regions in Australia: the Yilgarn Craton near Perth, the Pilbara Craton near Port Hedland, and the Gawler Craton near Adelaide. On the way, we'll meet the oldest minerals, the oldest fossils, and learn the connection between ancient bacteria and modern steel.

The Oldest Rocks In: Antarctica
Miniseries Episode 1: The frozen continent holds many secrets, including some of the most ancient stones in the world, the Napier Complex 3.8 billion years old. Today we'll learn what things lurk in the ice, and a harrowing story of polar survival from an Australian geologist, Sir Douglas Mawson.

Schedule Update
Our story will take a brief pause while I'm on summer vacation and fieldwork, including rocks more than three billion years old in Western Australia.But don't worry! In the meantime, there will be a seven-part miniseries on the oldest rocks of each continent. Tune in to find out which are closest to you, or use these as guides for a geology-themed vacation! After then, we'll return to the Hadean world to investigate the origins of life. Until then, have a pleasant summer, and thank you all for listening!Website: https://www.bedrockpodcast.com

Interview: Fossil Imposters with Dr. Joti Rouillard
My guest today is Dr. Joti Rouillard, a research fellow at the University of Science and Technology in Hefei, China. Dr. Rouillard talks about his research on the earliest fossils on Earth, microscopic bacteria 3.5 billion years old. It turns out, identifying a fossil bacteria is extremely difficult since they resemble other tiny non-living objects. We also talk about working in the Australian Outback, kangaroo encounters, and what happens when you mix alcohol and rocks.Dr. Rouillard's email: [email protected]

16: Life Before Fossils
When did life arise on planet Earth?Today, we look at the search for biological remains in the oldest minerals on Earth, the Jack Hills zircons of Western Australia, 4.4-4.0 billion years ago. We learn why carbon is an excellent building block for life, how to turn that carbon into diamonds and graphite, and why it's very hard to find conclusive fossils in very old rocks. Extra credit: Try to find all the things in your house that have carbon in them. Bonus points if you can find graphite or diamonds.

15: Sea Change
How do we know when the first oceans existed?Water leaves its' fingerprints over every surface of Earth, even in the oldest, toughest crystals. Today, we'll take an imaginary ride through the earliest oceans, examine how water slowly transforms everything it touches, and how these changes are recorded in the Jack Hills zircons, 4.4 billion years ago. Extra Credit: Make an underwater rock garden, walk into a muddy beach, or visit a dog park.

14: Waterworld
How did water arrive on planet Earth?Today, we learn just how much water Earth has, and where it came from in the first place. We'll take a joyride around the early solar system, climb a snow-capped peak, and learn how Jupiter may have played a crucial role in making Earth's oceans. Extra credit: Drink some water, make a snowball, or watch the Kevin Costner classic Waterworld.

13: Message in a Bottle
When did Earth's crust form? It's easy to take the ground beneath our feet for granted, but the story of our crust's origins is one of the most hotly debated topics in Earth history. Today, we'll learn how elements inside tiny crystals help solve this mystery. On the way, we'll meet two researchers who helped keep gold and scientists out of German hands in World War II. Extra credit: Look at table salt under a microscope, or find different colors of quartz in your local mineral collections.

12: Scratching the Surface
How is new crust made, and why isn't the Earth constantly expanding like a party balloon? To answer these questions, we'll track the life, death, and rebirth of Earth's surface. Stops along the way include the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, a fight to the death beneath New Zealand, and a stop for some Italian dessert.Extra credit: Experiment with your carpets at home, pushing them together and testing which one sinks beneath the other.

11: Heretics and Heroes
The idea of plate tectonics is the cornerstone of modern geology.But it wasn't always that way, and it wasn't an easy idea to sell. Today, we'll meet two scientists who faced ridicule for proposing continental drift: a German climatologist and an American cartographer, the greatest of her generation. We'll also meet a lost expedition to Greenland, the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and Jacques Cousteau.Extra credit: Look at maps of the ocean floor, or try to align the continents in various patterns on a map.

10: The Oldest Thing on Earth
What is the oldest thing on our planet? How old is it, and where was it found?Today, we tell the story of a worldwide, decades-long hunt for a single grain of sand. We'll journey to underground magma chambers, the sun-baked Australian Outback, and the lair of a giant shrimp.Extra credit: Let a handful of sand run through your fingers, or go pressure-wash something.

9: The Great Gig in the Sky
The Earth of 4.5 billion years ago was perhaps the most alien version of our world, thanks to a collision with a rogue planet. Days and nights were six times shorter, the newborn Moon was as close as a weather satellite, and everything was covered with a sea of magma. Today, we learn how the Moon transformed from a giant Eye of Sauron into our pale nighttime companion, with the help of a Canadian geologist, some homemade lava, and a bucket of water. Extra credit: Squeeze a stress ball, eat only one color of candy, and try to solve this week's hidden word puzzle.

Interview: Earth's Baby Photos with Dr. Nadja Drabon
My guest today is Dr. Nadja Drabon, a new professor at Harvard University. Dr. Drabon talks about her new discoveries of zircon crystals from South Africa that are more than 4 billion years old, some of the oldest fragments of Earth. Together, we learn just how much we don't know about Earth's earliest days, and what her discoveries can teach us about our planet's ancient secrets. We also talk about her field location in South Africa: the Barberton Greenstone Belt, a new UNESCO World Heritage Site. Dr. Drabon's website: https://drabon.eps.harvard.edu

Interview: Fixing Climate Change with Dr. Ella Holme
My guest today is Dr. Ella Holme, a postdoc at Yale University. Dr. Holme talks about her research on the mineral olivine as a potential antidote for climate change. Olivine can remove carbon dioxide from air and water, and further research into this mineral can help counteract increasing CO2 emissions. We also talk about how olivine is like the Hulk, and how Dr. Holme's path into geology started from childhood fears of tsunamis, climate change, and... werewolves. Dr. Holme's Twitter: @BandedEllaFrmtn

8: Bad Moon Rising
If you've ever wondered where the Moon came from, this the episode for you! To answer that question, we'll collect Moon rocks with Neil Armstrong, spin merry-go-rounds with Charles Darwin's son, and play planetary billiards. In the end, truth is stranger than fiction.Extra credit: Take some time for yourself and have a good long look at the moon.

7: An Ocean of Magma
Earth's first oceans were hundreds of times deeper than the Pacific and made of molten rock. Where did they come from, where did they go? What stuff was in them, how do we know? Today, let's dive in and see how these oceans turned into today's mantle.Extra credit: Drink a glass of ice water, watch The Core (2003), or see if you can find a garnet in your home or a museum.

6: Working Out the Core
Today, we'll learn how deep humans have traveled into the planet, and how we know what's even deeper down. We'll meet mineral oozes, coils of liquid iron, and a Danish woman from the 1930s who discovered the center of the Earth. Extra credit: Make a tin-can telephone, find an inductor in one of your electric appliances, or look for an aurora.

5: Building the Underworld
How did Earth grow from ant-size to, well… Earth-size? What perils did it face along the way? And how is the Earth's interior like a fine vinaigrette? Find out as we move forward in time from 4.6 to 4.5 billion years ago.Extra credit: try to freeze a mixture of oil and vinegar before they separate, find an iron meteorite at your local museum, or look for Ceres with a pair of binoculars.

4: The Cradle of Stardust (Season 1 Premiere)
Season 1 Premiere We finally start the tale of Earth’s history from the beginning, in the cold depths of outer space. The Sun is born and the first asteroids assemble. When these asteroids crash into Earth today, they provide time capsules from the beginning of the solar system. Extra credit: look for the Orion Nebula in the night sky, or go meteorite hunting with a friend.

3: The Dating Game
Our introductory trilogy on deep time ends by tackling an important question: How do we know how old the Earth is?

2: Three Recipes for Rocks
How can rocks tell us the stories of ancient Earth- stories of magma, water, and life? To answer that question, we look at a few common rock types and examine how they formed.

1: The Earth Calendar
Introductions all around- the podcast, the period of time we’ll be exploring, and the host. We’ll start by scaling Earth’s entire history down to a manageable 365 days.