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Episode Description
It's time for another BIG and BRILLIANT adventure into the world of science on this weekโs Science Quest!
Weโre diving into a prehistoric face-off this week to uncover the difference between two of historyโs most fearsome predators: Mosasaurus and Megalodon. One ruled the ancient seas with razor-sharp teeth, the other was a giant marine reptile built for ambush and power.
In Science in the News, a jaw bone found deep inside a cave in the UK is helping scientists rewrite the story of how dogs became our best friends. We also look up to the Moon, where a once-in-a-century crater has appeared surprisingly recently, Kevin Olsen from Oxford University joins Dan to explain NASAโs Artemis II mission, which will see humans travel around the Moon for the first time in over fifty years!
Itโs time for your questions too. Rosa wants to know why hair turns grey, and John Hutchinson from the Royal Veterinary College answers Maxโs big prehistoric question about what makes a Mosasaurus different from a Megalodon?
Dangerous Dan is back with The Bone Breaker, a creature with a seriously fearsome reputation.
And in Battle of the Sciences, Dr. Robyn Grant from Manchester Metropolitan University joins Dan to uncover the fascinating science of whiskers and why so many animals rely on them to sense the world around them.
Plus, we head back to the Pleistocene Period to explore what Earth looked like long ago and how geology helps us piece together the planetโs past.
What we learn about:
โข The difference between a Mosasaurus and a Megalodon
โข How dogs may have become manโs best friend
โข A brand-new crater on the Moon
โข NASAโs plans to build a base on the Moon
โข Why hair turns grey
โข The strange science of whiskers
โข The fearsome bone breaker
โข What the Earth looked like during the Pleistocene Period
All that and more on this weekโsย Science Quest!
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