
IncludeHer Finds Massive Gender Bias in Aus High Schools
A new report has revealed the Australian high school curriculum has a gender bias when it comes to teaching children about scientists and scientific discoveries. The study was conducted as
A new report has revealed the Australian high school curriculum has a gender bias when it comes to teaching children about scientists and scientific discoveries. The study was conducted as
Shawn O’Halloran and Dean Newbury beam in to discuss the never-before-seen police bodycam vision of the Altercation in Atlanta two years ago. This is a Trekzone First. Bodycam Vision 1:
As the writers and actors strike continues in Hollywood our favourite shows are placed on the back burner while the very real human cost of the industry is laid bare.
Welcome to the twentieth year of Trekzone. From humble beginnings, we’ve grown. What was a high school project has become the biggest hobby I could’ve imagined.
You can’t deep dive into the latest Star Trek news and opinion without beaming Larry Nemecek to the stage… he’s with us as part of our twentieth anniversary celebration with
Bill and Dan are the two halves that make up the main Trek Geeks podcast and they recently celebrated 300 episodes. Today we’re catching up all together for just the
First appearing on Trekzone ten years ago to celebrate ten years of Trekzone, Doug’s back and diving into life and Picard season three…
Lee Sargent beamed in live to return to Talkin’ Trek – our series of Trekzone Conversations diving into two guys thoughts on Star Trek… lets stoke the embers and get
The 2023 Trekzone Fan Film Awards begin our Celebrating 20 Years of Trekzone livestream event. We’re celebrating Star Trek Fan Films from over the past thirteen months with nineteen categories.
Twenty years ago I had an idea to fulfil a school assignment, ten years ago I started podcasting… on this edition of A Trekzone Conversation we celebrate that incredible milestone…
Anytime Supanova put on a convention it’s an awesome weekend. For the first time in a while, join us on a tour of the exhibition floor… catching up with management
You’ve heard him as Winnie the Pooh, Tigger or even Hondo Ohnaka … and now the man behind the voice joins us for A Trekzone Conversation direct from Supanova Sydney…
The best part of our hobby is the ability to get backstage and chat with the actors who headline conventions. On this Trekzone Conversation – I’m incredibly thrilled to sit
From Missy on Doctor Who to Miranda Croft on The Flight Attendant, it’s the incredibly talented, funny and cheeky Michelle Gomez – direct from her signing table at Supanova Sydney.
As we count down to The 2023 Trekzone Fan Film Awards on July 10, join us for a deep dive into the nominees for each of the nineteen categories. Today
It officially begins here. After thirteen months of manually scouring the internet and keeping a spreadsheet up-to-date, Mentioning Trekkie Mentions and Trekzone are ready to announce their nominees for The
The mantle of the far side of the Moon is likely drier than the near side, according to international researchers who say this could help us understand how the Earth’s companion formed.
The first trial of an Australian-developed technology has detected mysterious objects by sifting through signals from space like sand on a beach.
Rock and dust samples brought back from the near-Earth asteroid Bennu contain organic matter, including amino acids and all five DNA and RNA bases, as well as salts that formed early in the history of Bennu’s parent body, according to a pair of studies by international and Australian researchers.
The Schrödinger impact basin is an area of the moon that contains two gigantic canyons – that are definitely there whether you look at it or not – and international researchers say they might have found out how these huge valleys were formed.
Dust on the moon could one day be used to build solar panels, according to researchers who say this could allow astronauts to access power on the moon without carting heavy equipment from Earth.
They say music is the universal language of humankind, but some stars in our galaxy exhibit their own rhythm, offering fresh clues into how they and our galaxy evolved over time.
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The mantle of the far side of the Moon is likely drier than the near side, according to international researchers who say this could help us understand how the Earth’s companion formed.
NASA Goddard’s Jason Dworkin is beaming in once again to take us on a deep dive on this episode of Talkin’ Science.
The first trial of an Australian-developed technology has detected mysterious objects by sifting through signals from space like sand on a beach.
Rock and dust samples brought back from the near-Earth asteroid Bennu contain organic matter, including amino acids and all five DNA and RNA bases, as well as salts that formed early in the history of Bennu’s parent body, according to a pair of studies by international and Australian researchers.
Direct from The Australian Space Summit, Exhibition and Gala Awards Night…
The Schrödinger impact basin is an area of the moon that contains two gigantic canyons – that are definitely there whether you look at it or not – and international researchers say they might have found out how these huge valleys were formed.
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The views and opinions expressed by guests on our podcasts are their own and do not necessarily reflect those of Trekzone Media or its employees.