Geology Bites

Oliver Strimpel

What moves the continents, creates mountains, swallows up the sea floor, makes volcanoes erupt, triggers earthquakes, and imprints ancient climates into the rocks? Oliver Strimpel, a former astrophysicist and museum director asks leading researchers to divulge what they have discovered and how they did it. To learn more about the series, and see images that support the podcasts, go to geologybites.com. Instagram: @GeologyBites Bluesky: GeologyBites X: @geology_bites Email: geologybitespodcast@gmail.com read less

Our Editor's Take

Geology Bites is a podcast of conversations between host Oliver Strimpel and solar system experts. Strimpel has a specific interest in how the physical landscape originated on Earth. In this show, listeners hear about oceanic and tectonic plates and learn about how ice and lava affect topography. The discussions on the show extend beyond Earth as well. Strimpel and guests discuss lunar geology, Mercury's volcanism, Venu's rocks, and Mar's moons.

Host Strimpel studied physics at Cambridge University and astrophysics at Oxford University. He was a curator for the Science Museum in London and The Computer Museum in Boston. He became a patent attorney before studying geology at The Open University and MIT. The motivation for this podcast happened by chance. Strimpel was a visiting fellow at Oxford for a radiometric dating project. Those findings prompted him to create the Geology Bites podcast.

As a curator, he knows how to share information with visitors with varying knowledge. That acquired skill proves helpful for this show. Strimpel asks questions that help podcast listeners understand how stars and planets behave. Fascinating guests provide answers and context.

One episode of Geology Bites includes Claire Corkhill from the University of Bristol. She's a professor of mineralogy and radioactive waste management. She discusses how attempts to curtail greenhouse gas emissions have been insufficient. Many countries are increasing the use of alternative power, including nuclear power. Where will the radioactive waste go? Corkhill says some isotopes have a half-life of 200,000 years. Her team is exploring storage options in rocks 200-1,000 meters below the Earth's surface. Her explanation of the storage process is thorough.

Mahesh Anand joins the podcast to discuss NASA's planned astronaut moon trip in 2025. He's the Professor of Planetary Science and Exploration at The Open University. Strimpel asks Anand what NASA hopes to learn. Anand says they want to make the moon habitable and create a future base there. They will also investigate lunar geology. The biggest unanswered question about the moon is its age. Some say it's 4.5 billion years old, but there's no consensus. Anand thinks a sample from the moon's mantle could provide answers.

New episodes of Geology Bites usually arrive every month.

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Episodes

Martin Van Kranendonk on the Earliest Life on Earth
12-09-2023
Martin Van Kranendonk on the Earliest Life on Earth
In this episode, Martin Van Kranendonk lays out a convincing case for life on Earth going back to at least 3.48 billion years ago. To find evidence for very ancient life, we need to look at rocks that have been largely undisturbed over billions of years of Earth history. Such rocks have been found in the Pilbara region of northwest Australia. As explained in the podcast, the 3.48-billion-year-old (Ga) rocks of the Pilbara's Dresser Formation contain exceptionally well-preserved features that show unmistakeable physical and chemical signatures of life. While older 3.7 Ga rocks in west Greenland may also prove to have harbored life, the Dresser Formation rocks represent the oldest widely accepted evidence for life on Earth. Martin Van Kranendonk has devoted his long and prolific research career to the study of the early Earth. One major theme of his work has been to use detailed mapping and lab research to develop geological models for the environments of Earth’s oldest fossils. This has helped establish the biological origin of many ancient fossils. His recent work on a newly discovered find of exceptionally well-preserved 3.5-billion-year-old sedimentary rocks in the Pilbara Craton of Western Australia has provided the strongest evidence to date that structures of this great age were produced by the earliest forms of life. Martin Van Kranendonk is a Professor in the School of Biological, Earth, & Environmental Sciences at the University of New South Wales in Sydney.