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Quirks and Quarks

Quirks and Quarks

CBC

CBC Radio's Quirks and Quarks covers the quirks of the expanding universe to the quarks within a single atom... and everything in between.

699 - Why this biologist loves unpopular animals, and more…
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  • 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.


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    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.


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    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 prey
    Fri, 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. 


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    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 health
    Fri, 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.


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    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 one
    Fri, 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.


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    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
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