Episodes

Friday Aug 08, 2025
Dancing Cockatoos, Spider Schlongs, And Will I Be Hit By An Asteroid?
Friday Aug 08, 2025
Friday Aug 08, 2025
This week on Break It Down: cockatoos have added 17 new dance moves to their official tally, we may finally know where the ancient “hobbit” humans came from, four new species of tarantulas have been discovered with one key difference to other species, science has the answer as to whether you're more likely to be killed by an asteroid or an elephant, RFK Jr uses misinformation to pull millions of dollars from mRNA vaccine research, and we discuss how science fiction is helping scientists explore possible futures.
So, sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…
Links:
Why Are We The Only Surviving Human Species
COVID vaccines saved 2.5 millions lives
mRNA vaccine research wins Nobel Prize
How Has The Internet Changed The Way We Use Language?

Friday Jul 11, 2025
Moa De-Extinction, Fashionable Chimps, And Robot Surgery – No Human Required
Friday Jul 11, 2025
Friday Jul 11, 2025
This week on Break It Down: just a week after the discovery of our third-ever interstellar visitor we may know where it came from, ancient enamel provides a snapshot into the lives of prehistoric rhinos, the moa becomes the fifth species targeted for de-extinction, a robot performs gallbladder surgery – no human required, chimps start a new fashion trend with grass in their ears (and rears), and 100 years since The Scopes (Monkey) Trial, how much has changed?
So, sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…
Links:

Friday Jul 04, 2025
Interstellar Object, Cheesy Nightmares, And Smooching Orcas
Friday Jul 04, 2025
Friday Jul 04, 2025
This week on Break It Down: We’ve just seen our third-ever interstellar object whizzing though the Solar System, eating cheese really might give you nightmares (but so might dessert), cavers are rewarded with a treasure trove of blind, mummified invertebrates including the only known cave-adapted wasp, the Neanderthal fat factory is just a delicious as it sounds, orcas caught kissing out in the wild, and if the Moon gets slapped by an asteroid as NASA predicts there’s a 4.1 percent chance it might, it would be a 1-in-5,000-years spectacle for Earth to enjoy (from a safe distance).
So, sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…
Links:

Friday Jun 27, 2025
Wellness Whales, A New Blood Type, And A DJ Set From Space
Friday Jun 27, 2025
Friday Jun 27, 2025
This week on Break It Down: feast your eyes on the stunning first images from the world’s largest digital camera, capturing millions of galaxies and thousands of new asteroids. Why killer whales are rubbing each other luxuriously with seaweed, the world’s oldest rocks aren’t that much younger than the planet, mice born from two dads prove they’re fertile, a French woman becomes the only known person in the world with a new kind of blood type, and we celebrate 50 years of the European Space Agency with a special interview with astronaut Luca Parmitano.
So, sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…
Links:
World’s largest digital camera

Friday Jun 20, 2025
Artificial Eclipse, Dancing Dinosaurs, And 50 Years Of “JAWS”
Friday Jun 20, 2025
Friday Jun 20, 2025
This week on Break It Down: Two spacecraft just created the first ever artificial solar eclipse, thanks to some impressive drone photos we know now dancing dinosaurs might have been leaping around to impress females in Colorado, a child from the world's oldest burial site appears to be a Neanderthal-Homo sapiens hybrid, for the first time we know what a Denisovan face looks like, a medical breakthrough means we could have a vaccine against HIV (if only anyone could buy it), and 50 years after JAWS was released, we take a look at the lasting impact on shark conservation the blockbuster movie made.
So, sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…
Links:

Friday Jun 13, 2025
Ice Age Puppies, Sauropod’s Last Supper, And A First Look At The Sun’s Butt
Friday Jun 13, 2025
Friday Jun 13, 2025
This week on Break It Down: Seeing the Sun’s south pole for the first time ever, Ice Age puppies frozen in permafrost turn out to be wolves, a world-first fossil discovery reveals a sauropod’s final meal, “razor blade throat” and a traveling nimbus reveal what to expect from the new COVID variant, the deepest map of the universe now reaches 13.5 billion years into the past, and is giving nature a personhood a good way to get it better legal protections? Maybe.
So, sit back, relax, and let’s Break It Down…
Links:

Friday Jun 06, 2025
Space Explosions, Dead Sea Scrolls, And Why It's So Hard To Sex A Dino
Friday Jun 06, 2025
Friday Jun 06, 2025
This week on Break It Down: A great big explosion in space is the most energetic since the Big Bang, AI reveals the Dead Sea Scrolls could share the same authors as the Bible, it looks like the Milky Way and Andromeda will not collide in 5 billion years after all, pregnant female mice with low iron levels can lead to the development of male embryos with ovaries, two smiling porpoises are released back into the wild for the first time in a win for conservation, and we take a deep dive into why it's so hard to sex a dinosaur.
Second biggest explosion
Dead sea scrolls
Milky Way and Andromeda
Yangtze finless porpoises
Mice embryos
Hard to sex a dino
Spinosaurus Daddy
Undersea Explosions
Nine-Limbed Octopus

Friday May 30, 2025
Friday May 30, 2025
This week on Break It Down: The oldest fingerprint in the world might be left by a Neanderthal hoping to complete a face, scientists propose seeding life on Enceladus to see what would happen, we’re starting to understand more about the Incas’ mysterious string writing system, bioacoustics research could pave the way for us to chat to wolves in Yellowstone, prions prove they are just as scary as we always thought when they take over a woman's brain after 50 years, and we explore just how much memory humans really have in these big old noggins of ours.
Links:
Neanderthal fingerprints
Injecting life
Inca string writing system
Language of wolves
Prions
Memory capacity of the brain
Papahānaumokuākea
Trawling impact
Kilauea
CURIOUS Magazine

IFLScience - Break It Down
Your bite-size guide to this week in science. Join hosts Eleanor Higgs and Rachael Funnell as they discuss the biggest news stories of the week with guests from the IFLScience team and maybe even a surprise expert or two. So, let’s Break It Down

