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In this delightful 1981 clip from the television programme Wildlife on One (1977-2005), the BBC producer John Paling discovers a male baby grey squirrel abandoned in the Wychwood Forest in Oxfordshire, England. Realising the creature has been left for dead, he decides to raise it alongside his kittens. The squirrel, dubbed ‘Sammy Squitten’, proves both adorable and destructive as it adjusts to domesticated life, and before long Paling begins wondering how best to proceed. Can this semi-domesticated animal ever thrive in nature? Threaded together via warm narration from David Attenborough, Squirrel on My Shoulder proves a wild, entertaining ride that interrogates the boundaries of human and nonhuman animal words.
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Computing and artificial intelligence
A future in which ‘artificial scientists’ make discoveries may not be far away
9 minutes
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History
Hags, seductresses, feminist icons – how gender dynamics manifest in witches
13 minutes
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Earth science and climate
Images carved into film form a haunting elegy for a disappearing slice of Earth
3 minutes
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Biology
Butterflies become unrecognisable landscapes when viewed under electron microscopes
4 minutes
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War and peace
Two Ukrainian boys’ summer unfolds just miles from the frontlines
22 minutes
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Nature and landscape
California’s landscapes provide endless inspiration for a woodcut printmaker
10 minutes
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Love and friendship
Never marry a man you love too much, and other views on romance in Sierra Leone
5 minutes
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Engineering
Can monumental ‘ice stupas’ help remote Himalayan villages survive?
15 minutes
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Virtues and vices
Why Bennie tried to disappear, and what happened when he was found decades later
16 minutes