We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode Leaf-based computer chips, and evidence that two early human ancestors coexisted

Leaf-based computer chips, and evidence that two early human ancestors coexisted

2024/11/28
logo of podcast Science Magazine Podcast

Science Magazine Podcast

AI Deep Dive AI Insights AI Chapters Transcript
People
C
Christy Wilcox
K
Kevin Hatala
Topics
Christy Wilcox: 研究人员利用树叶骨架制作更环保的电路板。该方法涉及去除树叶中的活细胞,留下其坚固的叶脉结构,然后涂上生物衍生的聚合物。这种方法可以用于印刷电路和制作有机发光二极管,并且具有生物降解性和可持续性。研究人员进行了各种测试,包括焊接、印刷和蚀刻,结果表明该方法有效。他们甚至成功地在真空室中沉积了金和其他金属,以及半导体。虽然该技术尚未达到工业标准的耐用性,但它有潜力创造一个完全循环的经济,其中电子产品可以被回收并用于生物燃料的生产。 Kevin Hatala: 在肯尼亚图尔卡纳盆地发现的150万年前的足迹化石为直立人和傍人鲍氏种这两种早期人类的共存提供了证据。这些足迹包括一条13步长的长足迹和另外三个方向垂直的足迹,表明至少有四个人在同一时间段内在同一地点活动。足迹形态的差异,特别是大脚趾的位置和足弓形状,表明这些足迹可能属于不同的物种。对其他同年龄段遗址的重新分析也支持了这一发现,表明这种共存模式可能在超过10万年的时间里多次出现。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why are current circuit boards in electronics difficult to make more sustainable?

Current circuit boards are made of glass fibers and epoxy, which are highly durable but non-biodegradable, lasting thousands of years in the environment. They also require high temperatures and harsh chemical conditions during manufacturing, making it challenging to replace them with greener alternatives.

What inspired the researchers to use leaves for making circuit boards?

The researchers were inspired by the ubiquity and biodegradability of leaves. They realized that leaves, with their natural fractal structure, could be skeletonized and coated with bio-derived polymers to create a sustainable alternative to traditional circuit boards.

How do the researchers process leaves to use them in electronics?

The researchers skeletonize the leaves, removing the living cells to leave behind a durable, fractal-patterned frame. They then coat this frame with a bio-derived polymer to create a robust, biodegradable substrate for circuit boards.

What are the potential environmental benefits of using leaf-based circuit boards?

Leaf-based circuit boards could significantly reduce e-waste and the carbon footprint of electronics. They are designed for a circular economy, allowing for the recovery of metals and biodegradation of the substrate, which can be reused in biogas production.

Why aren't leaf-based circuit boards currently in use in consumer electronics?

Leaf-based circuit boards do not meet the industry's strict durability standards, which require materials to last for hundreds of years. While they perform well in most tests, they are designed to biodegrade, making them unsuitable for the current industry's long-lasting requirements.

What evidence suggests that Homo erectus and Paranthropus boisei coexisted?

Fossil footprints discovered in the Turkana Basin of Kenya provide evidence of two different species walking on the same shoreline. The footprints, which include a 13-step trackway and three perpendicular prints, suggest that these species were present at the same time, likely 1.6 to 1.4 million years ago.

How do the footprints of Homo erectus and Paranthropus boisei differ?

The footprints of Homo erectus resemble those of modern humans, while Paranthropus boisei's footprints show a more mobile big toe that splayed outward. The arch shape of the footprints also differs, indicating different walking motions between the two species.

Why is it challenging to determine coexistence from skeletal fossils alone?

Skeletal fossils often co-occur within sedimentary sequences spanning tens of thousands of years, making it difficult to pinpoint exact coexistence. Footprints, on the other hand, provide a more precise temporal record, as they are typically formed within hours to days of each other.

What conditions are necessary for fossil footprints to be preserved?

Fossil footprints require a soft mud surface to accept the impressions of feet, followed by a gentle layer of sediment that covers and preserves the footprints. These conditions are more likely to occur in environments like the shores of ancient lakes.

What future research might focus on regarding early human footprints?

Future research could explore additional footprint sites in the Turkana Basin to confirm the coexistence pattern and investigate the environmental factors that attracted both species. Researchers may also look at footprints from earlier time periods to understand the evolution of early human locomotion.

Shownotes Transcript

First up this week, making electronics greener with leaves. Host Sarah Crespi talks with Newsletter Editor Christie Wilcox about using the cellulose skeletons of leaves to create robust, biodegradable backings for computer chips.) This sustainable approach can be used for printing circuits and making organic light-emitting diodes and if widely adopted, could massively reduce the carbon footprint of electronics. 

Next on the show, Kevin Hatala), a biology professor at Chatham University, joins producer Meagan Cantwell to discuss fossil footprints unearthed in the Turkana Basin of Kenya). A 13-step long track with three perpendicular footprints likely show two different species of early humans, Homo erectus and Paranthropus boisei, walked on the same shorelines.

This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy).

About the Science Podcast)

Authors: Sarah Crespi; Meagan Cantwell; Christie Wilcox 

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices)