Afleveringen
-
What if there is fresh water hidden beneath the ocean floor?In September 2025, scientists confirmed for the first time the existence of vast reserves of fresh water beneath the seafloor off the coast of New England, in the United States. The water, collected during Expedition 501 of the International Ocean Discovery Program, turned out to be far fresher than anyone expected — reaching levels close to safe drinking water limits.
The discovery took more than twenty years from the first proposal to reality.In this episode, we enter the laboratories of MARUM, Center for MArine ENvironmental Sciences at the University of Bremen, where forty scientists from thirteen countries are working against the clock to analyze 718 sediment cores collected during the expedition. We speak with Doctor Brandon Dugan, from the Colorado School of Mines, and Doctor Rebecca Robinson, from the University of Rhode Island — the two co-chiefs of Expedition 501 — about what they found, what surprised them, and what questions this discovery opens for the future.
The episode also confronts a larger question: in a world where global water use has increased sixfold in the past hundred years, where water infrastructure is being targeted in conflicts, and where demand from artificial intelligence alone could reach the equivalent of Spain's annual water consumption by 2027 — could the ocean floor become part of the answer?
The scientists are careful: much more research is needed before this can be considered an accessible resource. But the fact that it exists, and that it can be studied, is itself a milestone.
This podcast was produced as part of the FRONTIERS Science Journalism Fellowship, funded by the European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon Europe research and innovation programmeThe residency was carried out at MARUM, the Center for Marine Environmental Sciences at the University of Bremen, Germany.
Graphic design was supported by Leonardo.ai.
-
What if the answer to the climate crisis has been buried at the bottom of the sea for millions of years?
At MARUM, the Center for Marine Environmental Sciences at the University of Bremen, there is a place that holds more than 200 kilometers of material drilled from the ocean floor. More than 350,000 core pieces. Collected over 55 years of scientific expeditions across the Atlantic, the Arctic, the Mediterranean, and the Black Sea. One of only three places like it in the world.
This is the Bremen Core Repository. And it is, in the words of the scientist who has guarded it for more than three decades, an Earth history book.
In this episode, we meet Doctor Ursula Röhl — Ula — the head of the Bremen Core Repository Group, who has witnessed the development of this archive from its foundation in 1994. She is joined by Doctor Thomas Westerhold, whose 66-million-year climate record was built entirely from these cores; Doctor Matthias Zabel, who reads the carbon signals buried in the sediment to understand how the ocean responds to our emissions; Doctor Enno Schefuß, who tracks individual molecular fingerprints inside the cores to reconstruct the climate history of entire continents; and Doctor Verena Hoyer, who has sailed on multiple drilling expeditions and discovered life in places where no one expected to find it.
Through their voices, we discover what is hidden inside kilometers of gray mud: the rhythm of the planet, the record of past climate changes, and the evidence that will help us understand where we are going.
This podcast was produced as part of the FRONTIERS Science Journalism Fellowship, funded by the European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon Europe research and innovation programme. The residency was carried out at MARUM, the Center for Marine Environmental Sciences at the University of Bremen, Germany. Graphic design was supported by Leonardo.ai.
-
Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?