How ancient humans crossed the vast ocean; Brain training for dementia; Life of science legend Maggie Aderin

史前人类如何横渡浩瀚的海洋;针对痴呆症的脑力训练;科学传奇人物玛吉·阿德林的生活

New Scientist Podcasts

2026-02-13

40 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Episode 345 More than 8,500 years ago, ancient people crossed the ocean to the remote island of Malta for the first time. Long before compasses or sails were invented, these prehistoric people navigated the seas on logs, using the stars to travel vast distances. Recent findings show we’ve long underestimated the voyaging capabilities of stone-age hunter-gatherers. We discuss the many examples of ancient travel - and what this all tells us about the ancient mind. Could just one hour of brain training a day be enough to stave off dementia? For the first time, an intervention against dementia has been tested in a randomised control trial. Lasting an impressive 20 years, participants in the trial played a brain training game for just a few hours a week - and the results were remarkable. The legendary space scientist Maggie Aderin joins the show to discuss her new book, Starchild: My Life Under the Night Sky. The Sky at Night presenter discusses her motivation for writing a memoir, how her love of astronomy came about, what it was like as the only Black woman in her university class, her time working on the James Webb telescope - and more. Hosted by Rowan Hooper and Penny Sarchet, with guests Maggie Aderin, Michael Marshall and Alexandra Thompson.To read more about these stories, visit https://www.newscientist.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • Welcome to True Spies,

  • the podcast that takes you deep inside the greatest secret missions of all time.

  • You'll meet the people who live life undercover.

  • What do they know?

  • What are their skills?

  • And what would you do in their position?

  • Vengeance felt good.

  • Seeing these people pay for what they've done felt righteous.

  • True Spies from Spiescape Studios.

  • Wherever you get your podcasts.

  • What's the furthest you've ever travelled on a log, plating on the water?

  • Like, well, one meter.

  • Oh, pitiful.

  • You need to be like your ancestors.

  • Thousands of years before the invention of compasses or sails,

  • prehistoric people crossed oceans on logs.

  • or maybe rafts of logs.

  • We're talking 50, 80 kilometres.

  • How did they do it?

  • We're getting into that today.