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THE CYBERFRAUD ROADSHOW

St Magnus Centre, Palace Road, Kirkwall

It's an increasing worry for businesses and public sector organisations - and the Cyber and Fraud Centre Scotland has been established to meet it. It offers services available nowhere else, to reduce threats and recover from attacks. This morning's session is targeted for public sector organisations.

CRACKING CONCRETE, GROWING CARROTS, SINKING CARBON

Phoenix Cinema, Pickaquoy, Kirkwall

Join regenerative gardener Elizabeth Woodcock as she takes the latest scientific research and applies it to growing our own food in our own gardens. “The best way to make our gardens more fertile,” she says, “is to restore the teaming web of life, and this in turn sequesters carbon into the soil.”

£4 – £6

THE MICROALGAL MIRACLE

Phoenix Cinema, Pickaquoy, Kirkwall

They are tiny single cells, invisible to the naked eye. They can consume agricultural and food waste – and produce fuel, fertiliser, feed, nutrients and pharmaceuticals. Dr Matjaž Vidmar of Edinburgh University describes the amazing abilities of microalgae and his current research into their potential.

£4 – £6

BUFFET LUNCH OF ORKNEY FARE

Peedie Kirk Hall, Palace Road, Kirkwall

Meet friends and enjoy the best of Orkney cheese, meat, fish and baking. Today's One O’Clock Toast, in memory of Eoin Scott, farmer, Islands Councillor, and Science Festival chairman, is given by Dr Edvard Kobal of the Slovenian Science Foundation.

£10

AN ANCIENT GREEK COMPUTER

Stromness Museum

Immerse yourself in the wonders of ancient technology as Dr Vassilios Spathopoulos presents an extraordinary working model of the Antikythera mechanism, an astronomical computer from 2,000 years ago, recovered from a Roman shipwreck off the small Greek Island of Antikythera.

THE CYBERFRAUD ROADSHOW

St Magnus Centre, Palace Road, Kirkwall

It's an increasing worry for businesses and public sector organisations - and the Cyber and Fraud Centre Scotland has been established to meet it. It offers services available nowhere else, to reduce threats and recover from attacks. This afternoon’s session is targeted for businesses.

A VIRUS IN OUR GENES

Phoenix Cinema, Pickaquoy, Kirkwall

The genome of human herpesvirus 6 (HHV-6) can integrate into the human genome – and thus be inherited. Prof. Ruth Jarrett’s group at the MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research is using DNA sequencing to try to find when and where this has happened in the past - including in Orkney.

£4 – £6

FANTASTIC LIGHT – INCREDIBLE INDUSTRIES

Phoenix Cinema, Pickaquoy, Kirkwall

Photonics – the optical equivalent of electronics – underpins modern society. It includes the optical fibres of the internet, high-power lasers that cut and weld, and solar panels. Prof. Robert R. Thomson of Heriot-Watt University describes some remarkable state-of-the-art applications for photonic technologies.

£4 – £6

GREEN SPACE AND BLUE SPACE AND ISLAND WELLBEING

MacGillivray Room, Orkney Library, Kirkwall

How can creative activities – including those drawing on Orkney's green and blue space – help fortify community bonds and enhance collective wellbeing? Louise McQuaid of the North Isles Natural Wellbeing Project reports on its 'green health' initiatives, joined by Lewis Hou of Science Ceilidh which supports The Ideas Fund.

£3 – £5

PAPAY DOONDIES

Orkney Theatre, KGS, Kirkwall

Tales of Papa Westray folk, past, present and future. There’s news of island birdlife, the story of the Traill family, a film of building a cassie sea defence-wall, and a new animated film produced by the pupils of the school, with a rich mix of voices from the community: follow the story of the Tystie's struggle to find fish!

£4 – £6

THE LOST FLOCK OF ST KILDA

Orkney Theatre, KGS, Kirkwall

Jane Cooper’s interest in knitting brought her to Orkney to set up a Boreray flock with the last few sheep from the Highlands – and she was astonished to find she was the sole custodian of this flock in the world. She began tracking down the origins of the Boreray breed and tonight tells the story.

£4 – £6

A HYDROGEN SHIP FOR THE ABERDEEN RUN

Orkney Research & Innovation Campus, Stromness

A new type of ship for smaller payloads will be demonstrated next year from Aberdeen to Orkney and Shetland. It’ll be a world first, powered by liquid hydrogen and uncrewed, with AI and robot systems. Mike Tinmouth, chief operating officer of the company leading the project, describes the technology and potential.

CHARLOTTE ROWAN IN CONCERT

King Street Halls, Kirkwall

Violinist Charlotte Rowan, regarded as one of Britain’s leading violin virtuosos, accompanied by Charlotte Stevenson in a concert of works by Grieg, Sarasate, Wieniawski, Dohnanyi and Debussy, and featuring a trilogy of pieces about The Sun.

£3 – £16

WE’LL MAKE OUR MALT: THE ART AND THE SCIENCE

The Orkney Club, Harbour Street, Kirkwall

The start of brewing and distilling is making the malt: getting the grain to sprout and convert insoluble starch into fermentable sugars. It’s mostly done today in large maltings but, says Hugh Alexander, micro-malting opens the way to try different types of grain, and for smaller-scale specialist brewing at community-sized levels.

£8
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