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Religion & Spirituality

Getting ahead of tsunamis

Science in Action by BBC

Jul 31, 202530:19Religion & Spirituality

After most of the population of the Pacific rim sought higher ground this week, we speak with the architect of the tsunami warning technology. Also how aging Killifish might help us probe our senior moments. This week, a...

About This Episode

Getting ahead of tsunamis is an episode from Science in Action by BBC. After most of the population of the Pacific rim sought higher ground this week, we speak with the architect of the tsunami warning technology. Also how aging Killifish m...

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Episode Details

Published Jul 31, 2025, 30:19 long, audio available.

Questions About This Episode

What is Getting ahead of tsunamis about?

After most of the population of the Pacific rim sought higher ground this week, we speak with the architect of the tsunami warning technology. Also how aging Killifish might help us probe our senior moments. This week, an M8.8 earthquake near Kamchatka in the western pacific led to tsunami evacuation alerts thousands of miles away. Seismologist Judith Hubbard was writing about the area in the days leading up to it, following a M7.4 event 9 days before, which we now know to categorize as a foreshock. As she says, it’s these subduction zones between tectonic plates that give out the most energy, produce the biggest quakes, leading to the worst tsunamis. The Tsunami alarms were based on modelling developed by Vasily Titov of NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory in Seattle. Having studied these phenomena for many decades, he describes the fine balance between the potential accuracy of a prediction, and the practical actionable advice authorities need to give out to save as many lives as possible. Finally, how can a short-lived African freshwater fish help scientists studying senescence? Stanford’s Judith Frydman and colleagues publish this week a study in Science that finds Killifish’s brain cells’ ability to encode proteins degrades with age, in keeping with similar patterns of older human brains. Because Killifish have such brief life cycles, yet seem to follow the brain cycles of most vertebrates, they provide an ideal model species from which to find out more, as she explains. Presenter: Roland Pease Producer: Imaan Moin and Alex Mansfield Production Coordinator: Jana Holesworth (Image Credit: Vasily Titov PMEL/NOAA)

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Getting ahead of tsunamis is an episode from Science in Action by BBC.

How long is this episode?

This episode is 30:19 long.

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This episode was published on Jul 31, 2025.

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Where can I listen to Getting ahead of tsunamis?

You can listen to Getting ahead of tsunamis on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.

Which podcast is this episode from?

Getting ahead of tsunamis is from Science in Action by BBC.

What are the episode details?

Published Jul 31, 2025 and 30:19 long