Quirks and Quarks

Apr 26: Understanding heat extremes, and more...

On this week's episode: scientists created a new colour, Ankylosaur tracks in British Columbia, Neanderthals got sunburnt and Jupiter has mushballs.

New colour, Canadian Ankylosaur discovery, Neanderthals got sunburnt and Jupiter has mushballs

A middle-aged man wearing a safety-orange shirt taht makes him look like a utility worker, is pouring cool liquid over his head from what looks like a Coke bottle.
A worker cools off while working in a street during a heatwave in southern Spain in 2023. Western Europe has been identified as global hot spot, along with southern Australia, southwestern South America, southeast Asia, the Middle East, central Africa, and northern Canada and Greenland. (Cristina Quiclerafp/AFP/Getty Images)

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

All the colours of the rainbow, plus one

Researchers have fired lasers directly into the eye to stimulate photoreceptors, and produced the perception of a colour that does not exist in nature. They describe it as a "supersaturated teal," and hope the technique will allow them to better understand colour vision and perhaps lead to treatments for vision problems. Austin Roorda has been developing this technology using mirrors, lasers and optical devices. He is a professor of Optometry and Vision Science at University of California, Berkeley. The study was published in the journal Science Advances.

Austin Roorda (pictured above) developed this revolutionary optical device that can shine laser pulses into the eyes to stimulate specific cells in the retina. Users are able to see a new colour not reflected in the natural world. It looks like an ultra-saturated blue-green.
Austin Roorda (pictured above) developed this revolutionary optical device that can shine laser pulses into the eyes to stimulate specific cells in the retina. Users are able to see a new colour not reflected in the natural world. It looks like an ultra-saturated blue-green. (UC Berkeley)
Following in the footsteps of an ancient ankylosaur

Paleontologists have found fossil footprints of an armoured dinosaur in the Canadian Rockies that fill in a critical gap in the fossil record. The footprints belonged to a club-tailed ankylosaur about five to six metres long, and are the first evidence of this type of dinosaur living in North America in a period known as the middle Cretaceous. The research was led by Victoria Arbour, curator of paleontology at the Royal B.C. Museum, and published in the journal Vertebrate Paleontology.

A person looks at the camera and smiles. In the background there is a three toed footprint etched into the rock.
Victoria Arbour with the Ruopodosaurus footprint in the field near Tumbler Ridge, BC, in August 2023. The full name Ruopodosaurus clava means 'the tumbled-down lizard with a club/mace.' (Royal BC Museum)
Did the Neanderthals die from sunburn?

Neanderthals disappeared 40,000 years ago, and new research suggests this corresponds to a period of weakness in the Earth's magnetic field that allowed an increase in the solar radiation reaching the surface. Researchers think they have evidence that modern humans were able to protect themselves from the sun better than Neanderthals could, and this might have contributed to the Neanderthal extinction. Raven Garvey is an anthropologist at the University of Michigan. Her team's research was published in the journal Science. 

Guido Camia dressed as a Neanderthal Cave man stands barefoots in a wood in Chianale, in the Italian Alps, near the French border, on August 7, 2019. - Camia, a former pastry chef, is an expert of survival techniques and a master in several martial arts. He organizes with his association "Adventure Experience" survival courses inspired by Neanderthals life in woods of the Alps region all over the year. (Photo by MARCO BERTORELLO / AFP)        (Photo credit should read MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP via Getty Images)
A new study suggests that Neanderthals lacked the close fitting clothing and cultural use of ochre to protect them from increased solar radiation 40,000 years ago. (Marco Bertorello/AFP/Getty Images)
Cloudy with a chance of ammonia mushballs

New observations and models of activity within Jupiter's stormy atmosphere is giving a weather report for the giant planet, and it's pretty extreme. Most interestingly, researchers predict conditions that could lead to violent lightning storms producing softball sized frozen ammonia "mushballs" that would rain through the upper atmosphere. The research was led by Chris Moeckel, a planetary scientist and aerospace engineer at the University of California-Berkeley Space Sciences Laboratory, and was published in the journal Science Advances.

An image of the planet Jupiter filling the frame.
Jupiter is known for its stormy weather, like the Great Red Spot, a storm bigger than planet Earth that some believe has been going on for 400 years. (Scott Bolton, David Marriott Perijove Jnce)
Shattering heat records: climate change is turning out to be worse than expected

In the last few years, we've seen global temperatures rising faster, with more extreme localized heat waves, than climate models predicted. Climate scientists are trying to understand this by investigating the underlying factors behind these heating trends. 

Richard Allan, from the University of Reading in the U.K., was expecting a larger than normal rise in global temperatures due to natural fluctuations, but global temperatures in 2023 and 2024 were much higher than expected. Their recent study in the journal Environmental Research Letters found a growing imbalance in the earth's heat system, with increasingly more heat coming in than leaving, in large part due to changes we've seen in global cloud cover.

This global heating is not happening evenly around the world. Kai Kornhuber, from the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria and Columbia Climate School in New York, found regional hot spots that are experiencing unexpected extreme heat, likely due to a combination of factors. That study is in the journal PNAS.

A close-up of a traffic sign in the foreground over a highway that says, "Extreme Heat. Stay Cool. Drink Water."
Earth is heating up faster than climate models predicted, leading to extreme heat waves in different regions across the planet. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)