Thursday, December 18, 2025
No menu items!
HomeNatureThe Nature Podcast festive spectacular 2025

The Nature Podcast festive spectacular 2025

You have full access to this article via your institution.

Download the Nature Podcast 17 December 2025

In this episode:

00:46 The gifts that sparked a love of science

Nature put a call out for readers to tell us about memorable presents that first got them interested in science, or mementos of their life in research. These include telescopes, yeast-themed wedding rings, and… cows’ eyes.

Nature: The gift that shaped my career in science

08:12 “I am the Very Model of a Miniature Tyrannosaur”

In the first of our annual festive songs celebrating the science of the past year, we tell the story of a diminutive dinosaur that turned out to be its own species.

Nature Podcast: Meet the ‘Wee-rex’. Tiny tyrannosaur is its own species

Nature Video: Hotly debated dinosaur is not a tiny T. rex after all

I Am the Very Model of a Miniature Tyrannosaur

I am the very model of a miniature tyrannosaur

A very different species from the T. rex that you knew before,

And though you may have thought I was a child, a small T. rex offspring,

I stand before you almost fully grown, a pocket-sized short king

For some of you this finding could be rather controversial.

As experts and debate have been at times quite adversarial

But this new study is quite clear, in fact it’s almost trivial

That now Nanotyrannus stands before you unequivocal

My cousin T. rex is an icon palaeontological

But youngsters have been missing from the record prehistorical

So when I was discovered some researchers said it’s crystal clear,

“It’s similar, but miniature! We found our baby T. rex here!”

For decades there were arguments and scientists did not agree

Until a team from Carolina took another look at me

They published careful measures of a fossil here for all to see

So now I get my very own tyrannosaur taxonomy

Their measurements were thorough with analysis of every bone

And counting rings of growth revealed that I was nearly fully grown

And so this study changes lots of data that you thought were known

I’m not a baby T. rex, but a species of my very own!

My teeth are many more in number than T. rex has in its roar

And my arms are longer than the king of lizards’ tiny claw,

In short, in matters predatory, Cretaceous and dinosaur

I am the very model of a miniature tyrannosaur

I am the Very Model of a Miniature Tyrannosaur was performed by Luke Thomas, with backing vocals by Kellie Lucken, Michael Broom, Mario Satchwell, Rachelle Schaum, Adam Pickles, Katy Roper, James Harvey and Catriona Clarke. That song was written by Dan Fox, with editing by Nick Petrić Howe and Shamini Bundell, and the music was performed by Phil Jackson with sound mixing by Jonathan Armitage.

11:43 A very scientific quiz

An all-star cast competes for the glory or being the winner of the Nature Podcast’s 2025 festive quiz.

Nature: Meet the ‘Wee-rex’. Tiny tyrannosaur is its own species

Nature: This company claimed to ‘de-extinct’ dire wolves. Then the fighting started

Nature Podcast: 3D-printed fake wasps help explain bad animal mimicry

Nature Video: ‘Aqua tweezers’ manipulate particles with water waves

Nature Podcast: Sapphire anvils squeeze metals atomically thin

Nature Video: Vesuvius volcano turned this brain to glass

Nature Podcast: Ancient viral DNA helps human embryos develop

Nature Video: Magnetic fibres give this robot a soft grip

Nature: These contact lenses give people infrared vision — even with their eyes shut

Nature Video: Is this really the world’s largest mirror? Researchers put it to the test

Nature Podcast: World’s tiniest pacemaker could revolutionize heart surgery

Nature Podcast: Earth’s deepest ecosystem discovered six miles below the sea

Nature Podcast: Nature goes inside the world’s largest ‘mosquito factory’ — here’s the buzz

Nature Podcast: Apocalypse then: how cataclysms shaped human societies

Nature Podcast: Honey, I ate the kids: how hunger and hormones make mice aggressive

25:21 “Hard the Hydrogel is Stuck”

Our second festive song is an ode to a rubber duck that was stuck to a rock, thanks to a newly designed, super-adhesive hydrogel.

Nature Podcast: Underwater glue shows its sticking power in rubber duck test

Nature Video: Why did researchers stick a duck to a rock? To show off their super glue

Hard the Hydrogel is Stuck

Hard the hydrogel is stuck

Firmly to this rubber duck

Piece of rock and duck stuck tight

Firm against the ocean’s might

Hydrogels made now sticky

Waterproof in salt and sea

With some proteins to inspire

And AI as amplifier

Hard the glue is sticking

Firmly to the small duckling

Gel, with mollusc protein trick

Glue, with everlasting stick

Won’t in water come unstuck

Tested on this rubber duck

Sticking for eternity

Until someone pulls it free

Diverse data trained it well

Making now this hydrogel

Hard the gel sticks well

Stronger than a mollusc shell

Hail the science-born prince of glues

Hail the duck with stickiness

More than gluing that which quacks

They’ll fix submerged pipes and cracks

One and eighty proteins trialled

From the creatures of the wild

Then refined with AI tools

Then ducks sit in rocky pools

Hard the hydrogel is stuck

Firmly to this rubber duck

Hard the Hydrogel is Stuck was performed by Catriona Clarke, with Luke Thomas, Kellie Lucken, Michael Broom, Mario Satchwell, Rachelle Schaum, Adam Pickles and Katy Roper. That song was written by Nick Petrić Howe, with editing by Shamini Bundell, and the music was performed by James Harvey with sound mixing by Jonathan Armitage.

28:42 Nature’s 10

Each year, Nature’s 10 highlights some of the people who have helped shape science over the past 12 months. We hear about a few of the people who made the 2025 list, including: a civil servant who stood up for evidence-based public-health policy; the science sleuth who revealed a retraction crisis at Indian universities; and the baby whose life was saved by the first personalized CRISPR therapy.

Nature: Nature’s 10

Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news, opinion and analysis free in your inbox every weekday.

Never miss an episode. Subscribe to the Nature Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube Music or your favourite podcast app. An RSS feed for the Nature Podcast is available too.

RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular

Recent Comments