Quirks and Quarks

Mar 22: What fossil plants say about the evolution of life, and more…

On this week's episode: is our universe inside a black hole, Antarctic explorers, tracking teenaged turtles, and carbon-neutral concrete.

Universe inside a black hole, Antarctic explorers, tracking teenaged turtles, and carbon-neutral concrete

A sea turtle being held up by human hands, it has a small black box on its back with an antenna attached.
A green sea turtle with a satellite tag glued onto its shell. The tags, which fall off after a month, revealed the juvenile turtles' journeys through the ocean as they travel through the Gulf of Mexico. (Kate Mansfield/Permit number NMFS19508)

On this week's episode of Quirks & Quarks with Bob McDonald:

Is our universe inside a black hole? New evidence from JWST galaxy images

New images from the James Webb Space Telescope of distant galaxies could support a mind-bending idea: that our universe was born in a black hole. The images show more of these galaxies spin clockwise, than counterclockwise. Lior Shamir, a computational astrophysicist from Kansas State University, says that may mean our universe inherited the spin of the black hole we're currently living in, though he thinks it's more likely that there's something wrong with how we're measuring objects in deep space. The study is published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Hundreds of tiny square images of galaxies fill the screen with fewer on the left side than on the right.
Images of galaxies as seen by the James Webb Space Telescope's shows that one-third of them are spinning in the same counterclockwise direction (left) relative to our Milky Way and the other two-thirds spin in the opposite clockwise direction (right). (Lior Shamir/Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society)
Modern-day Antarctic explorers go where no-one has gone before

CBC Reporter Susan Ormiston spent a month on the Canadian Navy ship HMCS Margaret Brooke as it took a team of 15 scientists on a research trip to Antarctica. She brings us the story of Kevin Wilcox, a researcher using an uncrewed sonar vehicle to map the previously inaccessible near-shore waters of the icy continent.

WATCH: Mapping Antarctica's ocean floor to reveal climate secrets

Mapping Antarctica’s ocean floor to reveal climate secrets

11 days ago
Duration 2:29

Finding out what juvenile sea turtles do during their 'lost years'

Once baby sea turtles swim away from their natal beaches, they enter what marine biologists call their "lost years," a time of critical growth spent wandering the open sea. A new study is filling in the picture of what they do during this time. The research, led by marine ecologist Katrina Phillips, involved playing a game of oceanic hide and seek to find and track over 100 sea turtles as they moved through the ocean. The work was published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

A woman holds up two turtles towards the camera, with a blue cloudy sky in the background.
Researcher Katrina Phillips holds up two satellite tagged green turtles before releasing them back into the water off the coast of Destin, Florida. (Kate Mansfield/Permit number NMFS19508)
Concrete plans to transform cement production's CO2 waste into new building materials

Cement production is responsible for five to eight per cent of global carbon dioxide emissions. A new study suggests that waste could be made into even more construction materials. Inspired by the way sea creatures build shells, Allesandro Rotto Loria — a civil and environmental engineer from Northwestern University — says they can use CO2 to boost the process to produce carbon-negative materials that could be used in materials like plaster, cement and as a replacement for sand in concrete. Their research is in the journal Advanced Sustainable Systems

A big snowball-sized white rock-like aggregation sits in a glash dish in front of smaller pieces of the carbonate minerals also in solid form.
Holding half its weight in carbon dioxide, the material could replace sand in concrete and other construction materials while trapping greenhouse gas. (Northwestern University)
A Dinosaur expert goes green — with a deep look at plant evolution

Paleontologist Riley Black has authored several books on dinosaurs. But she realized she had been neglecting the organisms that made dinosaurs – and all other animals – possible: plants. Her new book, When the Earth Was Green: Plants, Animals, and Evolution's Greatest Romance, looks at how plant fossils are telling the billion-years old tale of the evolution of complex life on Earth, from creating the oxygen that we breathe, to coaxing us out of the water and onto land, and even forming the forests that humans evolved in, which shaped our very anatomy from long arms and grippy toes.

A photo of Riley Black in a rocky environment. She smiles at the camera, and is wearing a black baseball hat and carrying a backpack.
Riley Black is a science writer and paleontologist, and the author of When the Earth Was Green: Plants, Animals, and Evolution's Greatest Romance. (Submitted by Riley Black)