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Title Catalyst: Thin Blood/Mountain Pygmy Possums/Coastal Flood Impact/Slinky Drop
Published Australia : ABC, 2012
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Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (26 min. 38 sec.) ; 160606763 bytes
Summary THIN BLOODTrauma is the leading cause of death for Australians under forty-five. But it's not just the injuries that can kill you. Anyone of us who is injured badly enough can develop a problem where the blood fails to clot properly. It affects up to a quarter of major trauma victims and it makes bleeding nearly impossible to control. Anja Taylor investigates new approaches for treating patients and the drug trial that could lead to hundreds of lives being saved.MOUNTAIN PYGMY POSSUMSThe female Mountain Pygmy Possums of Mt Buller are meeting some new suitors - males from Mount Hotham. The Mt Buller possums were only discovered in 1996 around the resort and ski runs, and since then, numbers and genetic diversity have dramatically declined. To help correct this decline scientists are translocating Mt Hotham male possums to Mt Buller, in the hope they'll mate with Mt Buller females. This has never been tried in Australia and is an important experiment for the survival of all endangered species. Graham Phillips joins researchers as they search for the offspring of this matchmaking exercise.COASTAL FLOOD IMPACTIn 2011, massive flood waters from the Brisbane River dumped 16 million tonnes of sediment into Moreton Bay. Scientists looked on in horror as they expected the worst for the coral, seagrass and dugongs that live in the marine park. A little over a year later, surfing scientist, Ruben Meerman, joins scientists who have been monitoring the impacts of the flood and discovers some unexpected results.SLINKY DROPEver pushed a slinky down a staircase? Most children are captivated by one of these coils of metal and the way it moves. But what do you think happens when you let a fully extended slinky drop to the ground? Will the top end fall first? Will the bottom end fall first, will both ends fall together, or will the two ends approach each other in the middle? Derek Muller, with the help of hi-speed camera footage, will provide the answer and the explanation
Event Broadcast 2012-04-19 at 20:00:00
Notes Classification: G
Subject Endangered species -- Breeding.
Marine ecology -- Research.
Mountain pygmy possum.
Sedimentation analysis.
Thrombosis -- Diagnosis.
Thrombosis -- Prevention.
Australia.
Queensland -- Brisbane.
Pacific Ocean -- Moreton Bay.
Form Streaming video
Author Phillips, Graham, host
Meerman, Ruben, reporter
Muller, Derek, reporter
Taylor, Anja, reporter
Burns, Brian, contributor
Connolly, Rod, contributor
Cross, Rod, contributor
Heinze, Dean, contributor
J. Balogh, Zsolt, contributor
Maxwell, Paul, contributor
Olds, Andrew, contributor
Perrin, Louise, contributor
Seppelt, Ian, contributor
Udy, James, contributor
Weeks, Andrew, contributor