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South Africa is home to many of the world's rhinos, but it's also a poaching hotspot.
Conservationists are coming up with creative solutions, and on What in the World,
we're going to be talking about how scientists are injecting radioactive substances into rhinos' horns.
I'm Hannah Gelbert, I'm the host of What in the World, an award-winning daily podcast from the BBC World Service.
We break down global news stories and trending topics in less than 15 minutes,
and you can find us wherever you get to your BBC podcasts.
They would determine a site where they knew the elevation and then use scopes to look at the top of the mountain and triangulate from there what the height of the mountain is.
They emit a signal that bounces off the surface of the ocean,
and by measuring the time that it takes for the signal to come back to the satellite,
we can get the distance between the sea surface and the satellite.
You have to take a suitcase with your GPS equipment and lug that up the mountain.
Yeah.
Did you have to put it actually right on the top?
Yeah, but how could you measure the height of the exact top of the mountain?
You're listening to Crowdscience from the BBC World Service.
I'm Marnie Chastiton, and you've just heard a selection of different approaches to a mighty task, measuring a mountain.
These all involve ways of calculating the distance from the tallest peak of a mountain to the sea level below.
But this year, in one part of the world at least, the level of the sea looks set to change.
We've basically redefined where sea level is for the United States.