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Author Topic:   Science Programs on Radio, TV and Internet
NosyNed
Member
Posts: 9003
From: Canada
Joined: 04-04-2003


Message 84 of 115 (440291)
12-12-2007 1:19 PM


Q & Q 2007 Dec 15 books for xmas
Home | Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald | CBC Radio
This Week on Quirks & Quarks it's our annual,
" Quirks Holiday Book Show".
From the worlds of palaeontology, nature and medicine, we'll look at 3 of our favourite science books from this season. First up is Heather Robertson's new biography of Joseph Tyrrell, one of this country’s most colourful explorers, and the discoverer of Albertasaurus - the first dinosaur skull found in Canada. Next is a conversation with West Coast photographer and naturalist Ian McAllister, about the wild wolves of the Great Bear Rainforest in BC. And finally, an interview with the author of Good Germs, Bad Germs - a book that examines our changing relationship with the microorganisms in our environment.
All this and more on Quirks & Quarks, Saturday right after the noon news on Radio One, or anytime on our web page.
Bob McDonald
Host
Don't forget to check out our new Quirks blog: Sorry - we can't find that page
Or subscribe to our Quirks podcast: Home | Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald | CBC Radio

  
NosyNed
Member
Posts: 9003
From: Canada
Joined: 04-04-2003


Message 86 of 115 (449862)
01-19-2008 1:53 PM


Quirks 2008 Jan 19
Home | Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald | CBC Radio
January 19, 2008
Solving Syphilis
Medical historians have always assumed Christopher Columbus had more than the travel bug. It's long been thought he and his men brought back syphilis when they returned to Europe. It's a theory based on historical records, more than scientific evidence. However, Dr. Michael Silverman and his colleagues recently discovered genetic evidence that backs this up, while treating tropical diseases in Guyana. Dr. Silverman, an infectious diseases physician with the charitable organization Ve'ahavta and an Assistant Professor at the University of Toronto, noticed peculiar skin sores on the arms and legs of children he was treating in the remote Guyanese jungles. The sores looked like syphilis, but he thought it was rather strange they were on the limbs and not the genitals. It turns out the sores were caused by a disease called yaws, which is caused by a non-venereal bacteria related to syphilis. Genetic tests of the Guyanese yaws revealed that it's likely to be the evolutionary ancestor of the infamous venereal disease. Dr. Silverman thinks Columbus and his men picked up yaws during their amorous liaisons with the New World natives. The disease was carried back to Europe where it quickly evolved into the virulent venereal bug we know today.
Squirrels Eating Snake Skin
When Barbara Clucas started her doctorate at UC Davis, her supervisor informed her of a strange phenomenon he'd observed. When California Ground Squirrels came across a spot where a rattlesnake had been lounging, the squirrel would start rubbing around and eating the grass where the rattler had been. Ms. Clucas wondered why ground squirrels would perform such maneuvers and decided to study this in more detail. Using discarded snake skins as bate, she was able to see ground squirrels chew up the skins, and then cover themselves in snake-scented saliva. Further research showed the squirrels were using the scent as a cloaking device to protect themselves from predatory rattlesnakes.
Seal Sounds
Just as you can tell whether someone comes from Brooklyn or Newfoundland by the way they speak, Weddell seals also have their own dialects. Dr. Jack Terhune, a biologist at the University of New Brunswick in Saint John, has been studying the vocalizations of Weddell seals off the coast of Antarctica. Dr. Terhune and his colleagues studied the sounds male seals make when they're defending their territory. Weddell seals make these sounds -- called trills -- by essentially humming incredibly loudly. Not only are trills loud (they can travel over 30 km underwater) and eerie, but they differ from region to region around the Antarctic continent. Dr. Terhune was surprised to find that even relatively close neighbors spoke different dialects, suggesting that the various seal clans don't do much social mixing.
Mistakes Were Made
The human mind has a built-in mechanism for helping us escape the painful psychological penalty of bad decisions - mistakes, in essence. The benefit of this is that we can make decisions without paralysis. The cost, on the other hand, is what psychologists Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson explore in their new book, Mistakes Were Made (but not by me): Why we justify Foolish Beliefs, Bad Decisions and Hurtful Acts. They look at why human decision-making predisposes us to sometimes make mistakes even worse by mechanisms of self-justification and confirmation bias - which causes us to reinforce our decisions and beliefs (even mistaken ones) ever more strongly. The implications of this for our personal lives, as well as for social structure and politics, they say, are important to understand. We spoke with Dr. Tavris, an independent social psychologist and writer.
Fact or Fiction: Too Cold to Snow
From time to time, we present a commonly held idea or popular saying - and ask a Canadian scientist to set us straight on whether we should believe it or not.
Today's popular aphorism: If the temperature outside is too low, it cannot snow.
With the answer is Dr. Glen Lesins at Dalhousie University’s Department of Physics and Atmospheric Science.

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 Message 87 by NosyNed, posted 01-23-2008 4:29 PM NosyNed has replied

  
NosyNed
Member
Posts: 9003
From: Canada
Joined: 04-04-2003


Message 87 of 115 (450770)
01-23-2008 4:29 PM
Reply to: Message 86 by NosyNed
01-19-2008 1:53 PM


Quirks 2008 Jan 26
I'm linking these together to help find them.
Home | Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald | CBC Radio
Stardust Update
Two years ago, NASA's Stardust Mission capsule returned to Earth, after gathering up particles from a comet's tail. Since then, researchers have been carefully analyzing the particles, trying to figure out just what Comet Wild2 was made of. It turns out that the comet material wasn't exactly what they'd expected. From particles that enter the Earth's atmosphere, we have a pretty good idea of what comet dust should look like. But what was found in the tail of Wild2 looked more like the dust you'd find in an asteroid. These results mean we need to revise our ideas about the differences between comets and asteroids. They may not be as different as we'd assumed. Dr. Hope Ishii, from the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, led the team that made the latest discovery
Smith Cloud Collision
Not that you should be alarmed, but there's a gigantic object hurtling through space on a collision course with our galaxy, the Milky Way. Dr. Jay Lockman, Principle Scientist with the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Green Bank, West Virginia, has been studying the mysterious object, called the Smith Cloud. First discovered in the 1960's, it has puzzled and intrigued astronomers who, until now, haven't had a particularly clear view. Dr. Lockman, using a new and extremely powerful radio telescope, was able to create high-definition images of the Smith Cloud which, it turns out, is a comet-shaped mass of hydrogen gas about 11, 000 light years long and 8, 000 light-years wide. It'll take another 10 to 20 million years before we really feel the crunch. But, when it finally does gets here, we can expect some fireworks.
Jurassic Teen Moms
We tend to frown upon teen pregnancies but it wasn't always so. If you look back in history -- very far back -- it seems to have been the preferred reproductive approach. Sarah Werning, a PhD. student with the Museum of Paleontology at the University of California, Berkeley, has been studying the fossilized bones of three species of dinosaur, looking for clues to their age and reproductive physiology. She's found evidence that dinosaurs, like humans, were sexually mature while they were still adolescents. Unlike humans, however, teen pregnancy was probably desirable. Ms. Werning says that because many species, such as T-Rex, took up to 20 years to reach their adult weight and only lived to about 25 or 30, it made sense to get a early start on baby-making.
Antarctic Volcano
The British Antarctic Survey has been flying routine surveying missions over the western Antarctic ice sheets for several years. They've covered the area pretty thoroughly, so it might sound odd that they've only recently discovered a volcano. But, explains David Vaughan, a glaciologist with the BAS, it wasn't the easiest thing to spot, given that it's buried under several hundred meters of ice. Dr. Vaughan and his colleagues recently discovered the volcano when radar images revealed a layer of volcanic ash, like a layer of icing in a wedding cake, buried half-way down in the ice. Beneath the ice, says Dr. Vaughan, is a tuya, a flat-topped volcano, like the kind found under the glaciers in Iceland. It turns out that the volcano in Antarctica last erupted during the lifetime of Alexander the Great and sent a plume of ash and steam about 12 kilometers into the sky.
Ants Look Berry Nice
Dr Stephen Yanoviak and his colleagues were studying a species of gliding ants in Panama when one of them noticed something strange. Some of the ants had bright red hind-ends, and were waving them in the air. When they examined the ants in the lab, they discovered that these ants were infected with parasitic nematode roundworms. Their research is now suggesting that these worms are causing the ants to change colour and change their behaviour, so they'll be mistaken for berries by birds, who then eat the ants and spread the nematode eggs around the jungle. The ants then bring the bird feces back to feed to their larvae, and the parasitic cycle continues. Dr. Yanoviak is a tropical insect ecologist at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.
Hot Insect Sex
For many male creatures, the colour of their surface is a way to let females know just how sexy they are. This has led to developments such as the peacock's tail, the red breast of the robin, and many others. So when Dr. David Punzalan, from the University of Ottawa, began studying Ambush Bugs, he expected to find a similar situation. Male Ambush Bugs have dark brown or black patches on their heads, while females don't, and darker headed males are more successful at securing mates. But when Dr. Punzalan tested the females to see which males they preferred, the females didn't show any preference. What Dr. Punzalan went on to discover is that the darker males heat up faster on cold days, thanks to the dark patches acting like solar panels. This extra heating gives these males an advantage at finding the females and increasing their own reproductive success.
Edited by NosyNed, : fill in the details

This message is a reply to:
 Message 86 by NosyNed, posted 01-19-2008 1:53 PM NosyNed has replied

Replies to this message:
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 Message 91 by NosyNed, posted 02-02-2008 1:44 PM NosyNed has replied

  
NosyNed
Member
Posts: 9003
From: Canada
Joined: 04-04-2003


Message 88 of 115 (451120)
01-26-2008 11:41 AM
Reply to: Message 87 by NosyNed
01-23-2008 4:29 PM


Re: Quirks 2008 Jan 26 bump with updates
Just to show the details of today's show.

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NosyNed
Member
Posts: 9003
From: Canada
Joined: 04-04-2003


Message 91 of 115 (453500)
02-02-2008 1:44 PM
Reply to: Message 87 by NosyNed
01-23-2008 4:29 PM


Quirks 2008 Feb 2
Home | Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald | CBC Radio
February 2, 2008
Shields Up!
Dr. Ruth Bamford has made a discovery that will delight avid Star Trek fans. She and her colleagues at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxfordshire, England, have developed an experimental version of the kind of space shield used on the USS Enterprise. Dr. Rutherford has been working on ways of protecting astronauts from the deadly effects of solar radiation -- a necessity on extended voyages to Mars. The device works by creating a protective plasma bubble around the space craft, held in place using a magnetic field. Trekkies will recognize this as a bona-fide deflector shield. Dr. Bamford says the laboratory results are promising. The next step is to take it into the final frontier.
Kangaroo Burps
Listen to or download the audio filemp3 or audio fileOgg files. external site - links will open in a new window (what's ogg?)
Western Grey Kangaroo - copyright Sean Mack, GNU Free Documentation License
Western Grey Kangaroo - copyright Sean Mack, GNU Free Documentation License
Kangaroo Burps
Kangaroos and cows have a lot more in common than you might think. Namely, they're both grazers and both depend on microbes in their digestive tract to help them breakdown their high-fibre diet. The difference is that cows produce high amounts of the greenhouse gas, methane, in the process. Kangaroos, on the other hand, produce almost none. Dr. Athol Klieve, a researcher with the Department of Primary Industries & Fisheries in Queensland, Australia, is studying the gut bacteria of certain species of kangaroo, in the hope that they can be transfered into the digestive system of cattle; and, in doing so, significantly cut back the amount of greenhouse gas they produce.
Bee Dancing
Queen bees mate with many males on their mating flights before they settle down to start a hive and raise larvae. Dr. Heather Mattila, a postdoctoral associate in the Department of Neurobiology and Behavior at Cornell University, wondered if the number of matings had any impact on how successful the hive was. She found that they were, but the reason why was surprising. By mating with many males, the queen increased her chances of having a few offspring who were good dancers. Since dancing is how bees communicate where resources like food can be found, having bees in the colony who can cut a mean rug gives the hive a big advantage.
Geothermal Energy
We're familiar with geothermal energy from mountain hot springs, geysers like Old Faithful in Yellowstone Park, and perhaps from the way Iceland has developed an entire energy system based on volcanic-heated water. However, geothermal energy is still just a niche player in the global energy picture. But that may be changing. Currently, we generate geothermal electricity from places where heat from the Earth's core runs into underground water, which can produce high temperature steam, but these sites are rare.
Dr Alan Jessop, who worked for Natural Resources Canada and led the geothermal energy program there, surveyed Canada's resources, but there were relatively few promising natural sites. Several nations, however, are working on new technology to create artificial geothermal reservoirs. These are enhanced geothermal systems in which deep holes are bored and water is pumped in to generate a source of very hot water. Dr. Jeff Tester, a professor of Chemical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Dr. Michal Moore, a Senior Fellow in the Institute for Sustainable Energy, Environment and Economy at the University of Calgary, helped prepare a report on the potential of enhanced geothermal energy. They think that up to ten percent of the US's electricity could be generated this way in the next fifty years - some 100,000 Megawatts.
Extremely hot rock isn't the only way to use geothermal energy, though. You can also get energy from relatively cool ground using a technology called geo-exchange. Currently, thousands of Canadian homes are heated this way using devices called ground-source heat pumps. Gary Poyntz, the Vice President of Clean Energy Developments (CED) in Toronto, installs these systems to replace heating and cooling systems, at an energy savings of 75% or better. Mark Douglas, an engineer at Natural Resources Canada, says that the systems run by extracting the small amount of energy from water circulated through a loop usually buried in the ground, and using that energy to heat the home. Paul Mertes, the President of CED, expects his business to grow immensely in the next few years, as the financial, energy and carbon emission savings from geo-exchange are very large.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 87 by NosyNed, posted 01-23-2008 4:29 PM NosyNed has replied

Replies to this message:
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NosyNed
Member
Posts: 9003
From: Canada
Joined: 04-04-2003


Message 101 of 115 (463407)
04-16-2008 10:25 AM
Reply to: Message 91 by NosyNed
02-02-2008 1:44 PM


Re: Quirks 2008 April 18
Home | Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald | CBC Radio
This Week on Quirks & Quarks:
"Our Muddled Messy Minds"
We humans like to think we're pretty clever. After all, we have all that grey matter sitting in our skulls, encouraging creative thoughts and brilliant feats of deductive reasoning. If we ever had a reason to sit on our evolutionary laurels, it would have to be thanks to our magnificent cerebral cortex. Or, would it? If our brains really are the epitome of human perfection, then how come we're continually losing our house keys and can't remember what we ate for breakfast last Tuesday?
In his new book, Kluge: The Haphazard Construction of the Human Mind, Dr. Gary Marcus argues that the human brain isn't so much a perfectly designed super-computer as it is an evolutionary contraption - bits and pieces that work well enough to get the job done, but far from the ultimate problem-solving machine.
Plus - The Lions of London.
All that and more on Quirks & Quarks, Saturday right after the noon news on Radio One, or anytime on our web page.
Bob McDonald
Host
Don't forget to check out our new Quirks blog: Sorry - we can't find that page
Or subscribe to our Quirks podcast: Home | Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald | CBC Radio

This message is a reply to:
 Message 91 by NosyNed, posted 02-02-2008 1:44 PM NosyNed has not replied

  
NosyNed
Member
Posts: 9003
From: Canada
Joined: 04-04-2003


Message 107 of 115 (480350)
09-02-2008 7:28 PM
Reply to: Message 106 by johnfolton
09-02-2008 6:15 PM


Why Post?
Why post a video full of lies and errors? Seems silly.

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 Message 106 by johnfolton, posted 09-02-2008 6:15 PM johnfolton has replied

Replies to this message:
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