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How past pandemics reinforced inequality, and millions of mysterious quakes beneath a volcano | Science

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Mauna Kea with podcast symbol overlay


Ian Aiden Relkoff/Wikipedia

Contributing Correspondent Lizzie Wade talks with host Sarah Crespi about the role of inequality in past pandemics. Evidence from medical records and cemeteries suggests diseases like the 1918 flu, smallpox, and even the Black Death weren’t indiscriminately killing people—instead these infections caused more deaths in those with less money or status.

Also this week, Aaron Wech, a research geophysicist for the U.S. Geological Survey at the Alaska Volcano Observatory, joins Sarah to talk about recordings of more than 1 million earthquakes from deep under Hawaii’s Mauna Kea volcano, which hasn’t erupted in 4500 years. They discuss how these earthquakes, which have repeated every 7 to 12 minutes for at least 20 years, went undetected for so long.

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

Listen to previous podcasts.

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Download a transcript (PDF).

Source: ScienceMag.org