Filtrar por gênero
- 699 - Why this biologist loves unpopular animals, and more…
We tend to think of animals like snakes, rats and even cockroaches as pests, but in her new book, biologist Marlene Zuk says there's a lot we can learn from these less than desirable creatures, if we just give them a chance.
PLUS:
A case of mistaken identity: The truth about the world's 'oldest' octopus fossil
From the archives: Carl Sagan on the worlds beyond our solar system
The evolutionary cost of our relationship with fire
We're not speaking as much as we used to — and scientists are concerned
Fri, 17 Apr 2026 - 54min - 698 - Moving beyond animal testing, and more…
There's been a growing movement to develop new technologies to replace at least some of the animals used in scientific research. Researchers across Canada are working to create these tools, to usher in a new animal-free era for medical science.
PLUS:
Harbor seals can 'talk' thanks to their parrot-like brains'Flaming hot' water ice may explain Neptune and Uranus' strange magnetismA thigh bone that could represent the oldest evidence of our human lineageThe ravens of Yellowstone remember where wolves typically kill their preyFri, 10 Apr 2026 - 54min - 697 - What we hope to see on the far side of the moon, and more…
On their mission around the moon, Jeremy Hansen and his crewmates will become the only four people on Earth to ever lay eyes on the entire far side of the moon. Since joining the space program, the Artemis astronauts have been undergoing intensive geological training to help train their eyes to look for lunar features that satellites can't pick up.
PLUS:
How Neanderthals skillfully hunted and butchered a giant elephantFilming fish over their lifetime reveals behaviours that lead to longevityHow our food environment shapes our tastes — and healthFri, 03 Apr 2026 - 54min - 696 - Dogs have been by our side for 16,000 years, and more...
New research confirms that dogs were the first animal to form a domestic relationship with humans, dating back to the end of the last Ice Age almost 16,000 years ago.
PLUS:
Constructing shelters out of Martian soil may be possible with bacterial helpMale-on-male cricket 'twerking' and 'booty bumping' is not a case of mistaken identityNarrowing down potential alien signals from 12 billion to 100, thanks to SETI Researchers find a brain switch in mice to turn a deadbeat dad into a doting oneFri, 27 Mar 2026 - 54min - 695 - A stinky planet full of magma, and more...
An unusual hellscape of a planet found 34 light years from Earth has a deep ocean of molten magma surrounded by noxious, hot, rotten egg-type fumes. It just may be the most uninhabitable alien landscape we've ever come across.
PLUS:
Neanderthal DNA can help explain how human faces formNearly indestructible teeny tiny tardigrades struggle to survive in Martian dirtTiny tags on monarch butterflies allow scientists to track their exact migration routeA weird fish has a big hole in its head. Scientists finally have an idea why.Fri, 20 Mar 2026 - 54min - 694 - Bonobo females bully the boys, and more…
We used to think that of our primate relatives, chimps were the more aggressive ape and bonobos were more peaceful. A recent study found that bonobos are just as antagonistic as chimps, but it's the females targeting males.
PLUS:
Mission to deflect an asteroid was a smashing successLow gravity environments can lead to stronger blood clots in astronautsFrom fire to galaxy formation, a celebration of friction as a fundamental forceWinter spiders survive subzero temperatures with a potent antifreezeFri, 13 Mar 2026 - 54min - 693 - Filming a black hole in action, and more…
You may have seen Black Hole, the image, but have you heard of the upcoming Black Hole, The Movie? This week, astronomers launched a new campaign to capture video footage of the supermassive black hole pulsing at the heart of the M87 galaxy.
PLUS:
Sunlight and fungi inspiration can help recycle plastic waste into vinegarAncient kangaroos were hopping giantsHow monogamy helps termite colonies number in the millionsOur infant universe's primordial soup was soupy, according to new studyFri, 06 Mar 2026 - 54min - 692 - How starfish move their tiny tube feet, and more…
Starfish don't have brains, and yet they're able to mobilize hundreds of tiny hydraulic tube feet to get around. Now scientists are getting an understanding of just how they do that.
PLUS:
Atmospheric pollution from an individual rocket re-entry event measured for the first timeHow the Earth’s greenhouse age transitioned into a world with frozen polesWhat is dark matter? The contenders — from WIMPs to dark matter starsQuirks Question: why doesn’t flowing water freeze at the same temperature as still water?(Correction: A previous version of the dark matter story referred to a study published last fall that mapped the distribution of dark matter, but the study was published on Jan. 26, 2026.)
Fri, 27 Feb 2026 - 54min - 691 - How living on Mars could change humans, and more…
From the pressurized space suits to living in underground spaces, it's clear that living on Mars would cause irreversible biological changes to any humans living there, to the point that it may be impossible for them or their descendants to return to Earth. With bigger heads and lighter bodies, might we also end up looking like Martians?
PLUS:
Yellowstone’s predators battle it out, and wolves remain top dogfossil of the earliest veggie-eater found in Nova ScotiaCovid is disappearing in animals, which is good news for deer but not as good for humanshow genes affect our lifespan more than we thoughtFri, 20 Feb 2026 - 54min - 690 - The sensitive secrets of elephant whiskers, and more…
An elephant’s trunk is incredibly strong and rugged, and yet it is one of the most sensitive touch organs in the animal kingdom. New research reveals that this sensitivity is partly powered by over 1000 whiskers.
PLUS:
A new 'inside out' solar system is making astronomers question planet formationPaleo-Inuit people in the high Arctic were masterful seafarers, new study showsTwo-month-old babies can categorize objects in their brainHow insects deal with smog or microplastics can impact them and the environmentFri, 13 Feb 2026 - 54min - 689 - Belugas swap mates for survival, and more…
Researchers made the surprising discovery that Alaska beluga whales have swinging sex lives — and that could be their key to survival in the warming Arctic.
Plus:
mission to the 'doomsday' Thwaites glacier in Antarctica ends in disappointment near-infrared light therapy offers hope to football players with brain injuries with nuclear power making a comeback, what's changed since the last Atomic Age?Fri, 06 Feb 2026 - 54min - 688 - Polar bears are thriving in Svalbard, and more...
Scientists spent nearly 25 years studying close to 800 polar bears in the Barents Sea region and discovered that those polar bears seem to be doing just fine, even though melting sea ice is also a major issue.
PLUS:
Sargassum seaweed is becoming such a problem, you can see it from spaceWhy some people only get mild sniffles with a cold and others get sickA woolly rhino's DNA found in an ancient wolf’s stomach reveals their quick demiseHow to change a memory — one scientist's quest to understand memory permanenceFri, 30 Jan 2026 - 54min - 687 - 'Gifted' dogs learn from eavesdropping, and more...
Some dogs are more adept at learning language than others. Researchers studying these special dogs discovered that, much like toddlers, these smart furry canine companions can pick up words just by eavesdropping on their owners' conversations.
PLUS
Tracking space debris using seismometersUsing nitrogen to boost treesHow Mars shapes our climateExtracting ice age mammoth RNA and using lichens to find dino bonesFri, 23 Jan 2026 - 54min - 686 - The reason chimps can reason, and more…
We may share a common ancestor with chimpanzees, but somewhere along the evolutionary line to us, our brains took a major detour. New research suggests that chimpanzees can rationally weigh evidence, a trait that used to be thought as uniquely human.
PLUS:
Why penguin-eating pumas live closer together in PatagoniaAnts sacrifice the strength of individual workers for quantityMapping the landmass beneath Antarctica's massive ice sheetHow deep sea ocean environments affect fish body shapeFri, 16 Jan 2026 - 54min - 685 - New dino species in another dino's vomit, and more
An unassuming fossilized slab in the basement of a museum in Brazil turned out to be 110-million-year-old dinosaur vomit, and inside that vomit were the bones of two strange, seagull-sized pterosaurs.
PLUS:
Loss of fresh groundwater is now the leading driver of sea level riseHow doubting your self-doubt makes you doubt lessA huge black hole in a peculiar galaxy may date from the universe’s earliest moments Shining a light on where viruses hide out in our bodies, and how they make us sickFri, 09 Jan 2026 - 54min - 684 - Dust? Tongues? Uranus? It’s our Holiday Question Show!
On this week’s episode of Quirks & Quarks, it's our ever-popular and always satisfying Holiday Listener Question Show that includes:
Why did a Canadian astronaut's eyesight change when she went to space?
How is the dust inside our homes changing?
Why do some professional athletes stick out their tongues when they play?
Why are most fruits round, but bananas and pineapple are not?
What would have happened if the dino-killing asteroid never struck Earth?
We'll satisfy all these scientific curiosities and many more!
Fri, 02 Jan 2026 - 54min - 683 - Predictions about science in 2025, recorded 25 years ago
In 2000, Quirks & Quarks celebrated its 25th anniversary by travelling forward in time — to 2025 — to find out how science had changed in the years since. In this fictitious future, our present, Zargon the robot, wakes up a Bob McDonald clone from the year 2000 to speak with scientists about 25 years of science. It's a mindbending audio time-capsule with predictions that were oddly prescient, sometimes unsettling or wildly wrong.
Thu, 25 Dec 2025 - 54min - 682 - Whales, sex, and rocks — it's our holiday book show!
We talk to authors of some of this year’s most fascinating science books in our annual Holiday Book Show.
INCLUDING:
Questioning the purpose of whale song — for love or echolocation?Journeying through deep geological time to better tackle problems of the futureBiological sex is complicated but that's what helps animals like humans thriveMini reviews of: The Martians by David Baron, Dinner With King Tut by Sam Kean and The Mind Electric by Pria Anand.Fri, 19 Dec 2025 - 54min - 681 - How Jeremy Hansen is prepping for the moon, and more…
Next stop - the moon! Jeremy Hansen stops by our studio to chat about how he’s prepping to be the first Canadian to go to the moon.
Plus:
Santa’s reindeer may be losing their antlers –– and climate change could be the culprit
Reindeer are the only animal in the deer family where the females also grow antlers, and they typically have a full rack over the wintertime and drop them in June when they give birth. University of Guelph PhD student Allegra Love was monitoring reindeer on Fogo Island in Newfoundland, when she made a surprising discovery that female reindeer are losing and growing their antlers much earlier than usual. This can put more stress on the animal during a crucial part of their pregnancy, and the researchers think this could eventually lead to the reindeer losing their antlers altogether. The work was published in the journal Ecosphere.
Pterosaur brains reveal clues about why these mighty fliers took to the skies
Flight has only evolved among vertebrates three times — in bats, birds, and first in pterosaurs. How pterosaurs first took to the skies was always a mystery to scientists, until the discovery of a fossilized 230-million year old pterosaur relative in Brazil. An international team, including Ohio University professor Lawrence Witmer, used an MRI for detailed analysis of the fossilized skull, to pinpoint the miniscule brain changes that happened as the animal developed the capacity to fly. The research was published in the journal Current Biology.
Scientists are using AI to find life in 3 billion year old rocks
Earth’s earliest signs of life are often incredibly difficult to detect. An international team of researchers have developed a new tool that uses AI to find “whispers” of life locked inside ancient rocks. Using this tool, the researchers, including astrobiologist Michael Wong from Carnegie Science, were able to detect fresh chemical evidence of life in rocks that are 3.3 billion years old. This tool can not only be used to explore the origins of life here on Earth, but also on Mars and other planetary bodies. The work was published in the journal PNAS.
Fri, 12 Dec 2025 - 54min - 680 - Cleveland’s ancient car-sized sea monster had bony fangs, and more…
Scientists are shedding light on the strange, car-sized, armoured fish that lived 360 million years ago in what is now Cleveland.
Plus:
The cosmic collider that gave us our moon came from our own solar system, soccer fanatics' brains are wired differently than regular fans, industrial chemicals are hurting our microbiome, and scientists are using our brains to build a better computer.
Fri, 05 Dec 2025 - 54min - 679 - The environmental costs of nation-building, and more…
On this week’s episode: a mini tyrannosaur is a new species, ants redesign to avoid illness, toxic lead gave humans the edge over Neanderthals, invasive fish are evolving to avoid eradication attempts, and how big mining projects — and attempts to hurry them along — can spell bad news for the environment.
Fri, 28 Nov 2025 - 54min - 678 - The mystery of the drunken trees, and more…Fri, 21 Nov 2025 - 54min
- 677 - Making snake bites less deadly, and more…Fri, 14 Nov 2025 - 54min
- 676 - The pros and cons of geoengineering, and more...Fri, 07 Nov 2025 - 54min
- 675 - Sleuthing out scientific fraud, and more...Fri, 31 Oct 2025 - 54min
- 674 - Rise of the zombie bugs, and more…Fri, 24 Oct 2025 - 54min
Podcasts semelhantes a Quirks and Quarks
20/20 ABC News
Cost of Living CBC
48 Hours CBS News
Choice Classic Radio Detectives | Old Time Radio Choice Classic Radio
The Ben Mulroney Show Corus Radio
EST Afternoons with Hernan Salas & Joaquin Gage Edmonton Sports Talk
Forensic Files HLN
Stuff You Should Know iHeartPodcasts
Morning Joe Joe Scarborough, Mika Brzezinski, MS NOW, Willie Geist
Dateline NBC NBC News
Totally Useless Information with Nick & Roy Nick Maiorano and Roy Lo Cascio
The Rachel Maddow Show Rachel Maddow, MS NOW
TED Talks Daily TED
Volvo - Made By Sweden Volvo Car Sverige
Outros Podcasts de Ciência e Medicina
The Best of Coast to Coast AM iHeartPodcasts and Coast to Coast AM
Ancient Aliens PodcastOne
Science with Sabine Sabine Hossenfelder
TED Radio Hour NPR
Space Nuts: Astronomy Insights & Cosmic Discoveries Professor Fred Watson and Andrew Dunkley
Sasquatch Chronicles Sasquatch Chronicles - Bigfoot Encounters
Radiolab WNYC Studios
BBC Inside Science BBC Radio 4
UFO Files Forbidden Knowledge Network
Uncharted with Hannah Fry BBC Radio 4
StarTalk Radio Neil deGrasse Tyson
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast Dr. Jordan B. Peterson
Hidden Brain Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam
Science News Daily brief.news
Wild Thing Foxtopus Ink
Space News Today Bitesz.com | Podcasts
Les années lumière Radio-Canada
Rain Sounds - 10 Hours Sol Good Media
Science Magazine Podcast Science Magazine
What's Up Docs? BBC Radio 4
