Dividing lines
A shift in the Civilian Controlled Zone in South Korea has the Unexpected Elements team thinking about all things boundaries, borders, lines, and barriers.
This week South Korea announced they will be adjusting the Civilian Controlled Zone that borders the demilitarised area between North and South Korea. The reshuffle will allow thousands of civilians to be able to move with more freedoms, but for the Unexpected Elements team, it’s sparked a conversation about scientific borders, boundaries, lines and barriers.
First up, a look at the Wallace Line, an obscure ecological border in Indonesia that marks the boundary between Asian tigers and Australian kangaroos with Dr Ian McFadden from Queen Mary University. We learn about the blood-brain barrier, could new ‘shuttle’ technologies help deliver vital new medicines that could help with Alzheimer’s?
Plus, why conflict causes the cost of flights to rise, and one scientist’s attempt to map underground fungi networks.
All that, plus many more Unexpected Elements.
Presenter: Marnie Chesterton, with Candice Bailey and Paul Adepoju
Producers: Margaret Sessa Hawkins, with Sophie Ormiston, Lucy Davies and Robbie Wojciechowski
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- Fri 26 Jun 202609:06GMTBBC World Service
- Fri 26 Jun 202623:06GMTBBC World Service
- Sat 27 Jun 202603:06GMTBBC World Service
- Sat 27 Jun 202614:06GMTBBC World Service News Internet
- Sun 28 Jun 202619:06GMTBBC World Service
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Unexpected Elements
The news you know, the science you don't

