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Pierre DE PARSCAU

Paris

Passionate about travel and adventure, Pierre makes documentaries about minority cultures around the world. In 2015 he became a crew member of the TARA ship expeditions and directed two films for France Télévisions. He regularly collaborates with ARTE, Le Monde and Ushuaia TV.

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Some 90% of the digital information that exists today was created in the past two years! Data is generated at an increasingly fast rate and finding new materials able to capture this expanding digital world while using less energy has become a priority for many research laboratories around the world. The Jean Lamour Institute, in eastern France, has a state of the art nanotechnology equipment to take on this challenge...

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Future of memory (The)
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In Atlit, northern Israel, a team of archaeologists went to explore a Christian cemetery dating from the 13th century. The first excavations carried out by the British in 1934 led to the discovery of more than 2,000 tombs, providing clues to the current layout of the skeletons. Today, archaeologists are trying to restore the original cemetery in its conditions before the English changed them. Based on the metal objects and ceramics found, archaeologists will be able to learn more about these…

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On the tombs of the crusaders
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If we are to one day communicate naturally with robots, they will need to master not only speech, but also the subtle yet essential rules of non-verbal communication such as posture and eye movement. A team of researchers is using machine-learning techniques to teach those skills to Nina, their humanoid robot.

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Through Nina's eyes
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The Gaia satellite is dedicated to astrometry and was launched by ESA in 2013 to map our galaxy in 3D. A team of engineers and researchers from the Paris Observatory based in Meudon is taking part in this mission to try to find out the position and movement of the stars. The probe scans the universe continuously and sends a large amount of data a part of which is studied and analysed by the Observatory team. The results of the European Gaia mission are published in a catalogue and help us to…

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Mapping our galaxy
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The advent of digital photography has rendered film obsolete. Photo studios either sell their negatives to salvage the tiny amounts of silver contained in their coating or they just burn them in order to free some space. A team of researchers is trying to collect and save these snapshots of Indian history.

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Photos Studios
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Can human development continue at this pace without causing a loss of biodiversity? A group of researchers at the French Institute of Pondicherry believes so. By studying the impact of human activities on a biological hotspot in the South of India, they hope to find the key to a harmonious coexistence between humans and wildlife.

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India: Nature under Pressure
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Due to global warming and ocean acidification, coral reefs are now an endangered ecosystem. Aboard research shooner Tara, scientists embarked the Tara Pacific expedition in 2016, whose goal is to diagnose the health condition of corals. They aim at creating the most complete database about corals to date. To that end, they use visual analysis, samples, and a new cartography tool for ocean floors, the Hyperdriver. Divers soon noticed the high mortality rate of the reefs, with most corals losing…

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TARA at the Bedside of Coral
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In French Guiana, leatherback turtles—the largest sea turtles in the world—return to the same beach multiple times over the year to lay their eggs. But fewer are making it back, threatening the species with extinction. Researchers have been tracking and monitoring them to better understand the increasing anthropogenic and environmental pressures on their ecosystem.

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Giant Turtles of Yalimapo (The)
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A very unique phenomenon is taking place on the French Guyanese coastline. In the heart of the mangrove, shoals of mud and vegetation roam along the coasts and greatly modify the contour of the coastline. This dynamic marshland ecosystem is being studied by geographer Antoine Gardel and his team, who have developed observation techniques to better understand this ever-changing natural environment.

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French Guiana and its changing coastline
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Among our five senses, olfaction has a privileged relationship with our brain. This is evidenced by the significant neural activities observed in contact with different fragrances, which captivate both the scientific community and the cosmetics industry. At the Nice Institute of Chemistry, experiments are conducted to observe brain response to different scents in humans. If they vary according to age, level of education, and memories of subjects, they demonstrate the stimulating, soothing or…

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Perfumes, a science in bottles
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At the Institut Henri Poincaré, the exhibition "Esthétopies, variétés d'espaces sensibles" (esthetopies, varieties of sensitive spaces) has the ambitious goal of sharing the fascinating beauty of non-Euclidian geometry with the general public. This project originated from the initiative of Pierre Berger, a former student of Decorative Arts, now a mathematician specialising in three-dimension spaces. Inspired as much by Man Ray's writings as by the work of William Thurston, he designed a…

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When maths turn into art
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For several decades, researchers and engineers have been trying to unravel the mysteries of Mars. Before humans can set foot on the planet, rovers will provide them with valuable information. Researchers from LAB and IRAP tell us about ChemCam, an instrument placed on top of the Curiosity rover to analyse the compositions of Mars rocks. After an eight-month space voyage, the robot finally landed on the Red Planet on August 6, 2012 to collect data on its different geological periods, reconstruct…

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Martians of Toulouse (The)
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Following the race towards miniaturization that has brought us the smaller touch sensitive screens we use every day, scientists are now trying to see a bigger picture. Thanks to increasingly innovative screens, they are designing a number of tools that allow unprecedented interactions between man and machine. Discover the future technologies being developed at France's Digiscope, a network of experimental platforms.

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Science Heads for the Big Screen(s)
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Does our sense of direction change as we get older? A team of researchers is studying the toll that age takes on our vision. To do this, they immerse research subjects fully equipped with sensors in an artificial street. This StreetLab, developed by the Vision Institute and the Pierre and Marie Curie University, is as modular as a movie set.

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Our Ageing Vision
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The first-ever international race of molecule-cars will take place at the CEMES laboratory in Toulouse this fall. Five teams are fine-tuning their cars-each made up of around a hundred atoms and measuring a few nanometers in length. They will be propelled by an electric current on a gold atom "race track." We take you behind the scenes to see how these researcher-racers are preparing for the NanoCar Race.

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NanoCar Race, driving molecules to the finish line
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"People of the Seine" is an audio programme for walkers. Created by Isabelle Bachoucke (historian at School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences and Center for Historical Studies) and Sarah Gensburger (sociologist at French National Center for Scientific Research and Institute for Political Social Sciences), written and dubbed by Michele Cohen (artistic director), this programme immerses the listener into the History of the Seine and its people at the eighteenth century, through nineteen…

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People of the Seine
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Edible insects are now considered to be an alternative source of protein for a human population set to increase by 2 billion by 2050. Yet a competitive production method still needs to be found. We ask researchers and future manufacturers how they are trying to overcome the challenges involved in this new type of farming to turn it into a substantial French and European industrial sector.

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Edible Insects: a New Industry in the Making
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Microalgae can produce food, fuel and capture carbon dioxide in the process. These tiny organisms seem to meet many of humanity's development challenges. Yet scaling up the technology from a lab environment to industrial capacity is no easy task. The AlgoSolis research platform, inaugurated this year on the West coast of France, will provide scientists the tools they need to develop and test the next generation of technologies for a mass production of microalgae.

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Biotech's Green Gold?

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