Quirks and Quarks

May 24: How to live forever, and more...

On this week's show: chimpanzees drum to the beat, Archaeopteryx flew but not very well, houses made of fungus, an emotional Band-Aid and what it takes to live forever.

Chimps drum to the beat, Archaeopteryx flew poorly, houses made of fungus and an emotional Band-Aid

A picture taken on January 24, 2017 shows a woman running at sunset on the beach of Les Sables d'Olonne, western France. (Photo by JEAN-SEBASTIEN EVRARD / AFP) (Photo by JEAN-SEBASTIEN EVRARD/AFP via Getty Images)
A scientist says we need to better understand how we age if we want to live for longer. (Jean-Sebastien Evrard/AFP/Getty Images)

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

Chimpanzees lay down mad beats to communicate 

Apart from their rich vocal palette, chimpanzees drum on trees to communicate over long distances. A new interdisciplinary study, led in part by PhD student Vesta Eleuteri and primatologist Cat Hobaiter from the University of St. Andrews, investigated the rhythms they used and found that different populations drum with rhythms similar to the beats in human music. The research was published in the journal Current Biology.

Four photos of a chimp excitedly hitting a tree root.
Researchers found that chimps have a sense of rhythm in their drumming calls that can be heard over a kilometre away in the forest. (Adrian Soldati)
An exciting new fossil of an early ancestor of modern birds gives insight into avian evolution

The Archaeopteryx, a 150-million-year-old bird-like dinosaur, is known from about a dozen fossils found in Germany. A new one recently studied at Chicago's Field Museum may be the best preserved yet. It's giving researchers, like paleontologist Jingmai O'Connor, new insights into how the ancient animal moved around the Jurassic landscape. The research was published in the journal Nature.

A side by side shot of a piece of rock, on the left you can see two wing bones jutting out, on the right you see the fully extracted fossil.
A team of paleontologists spent more than 1,300 hours preparing the Archaeopteryx fossil (left) to get a clearer view (right) using UV light and CT scanning. (Delaney Drummond/Field Museum)
A house with good bones — in more ways than one 

Inspired by the structure of bone, researchers have created limestone-like biomineralized construction materials using a fungal-scaffold that they seeded with bacteria. Montana State University's Chelsea Heveran said they demonstrated they could mould it into specific shapes with internal properties similar to bone, and that it remained alive for a month. It's early days yet, but she envisions a day when they can grow living structural material on site that may even be able to heal themselves. The study is in the journal Cell Reports Physical Science

An overhead close shots shows three scientists in a lab wearing white lab coats and safety goggles holding a LEGO-brick like structure.
Senior author Chelsea Heveran (right) of Montana State University and students work to prepare the biomineralized living material made from fungi and bacteria. (Maren Stubenvoll/Montana State University)
A different kind of emotional Band-Aid 

Scientists have created a clever combination of physical sensors and computer technology to produce a flexible Band-Aid-like device that can accurately read emotions when it is stuck to the face. It's not quite mind reading, but it could give physicians better insight into the emotional state of their patients. Huanyu Cheng of Penn State led the work, which was published in the journal Nano Letters.

Researchers at Penn State University are developing a sensor that sticks onto the skin to read several physiological responses, including emotions such as happiness, surprise, fear, sadness and anger. It could be critical in medical emergencies in patients that can't speak, such as infants.
Researchers are developing a sensor that sticks onto the skin to read several physiological responses associated with emotions such as happiness, surprise, fear, sadness and anger. (Yangbo Yuan/Penn State University)
A scientist explores what it takes to live a longer, better life 

Do you want to live forever? As he noticed himself showing signs of aging, immunologist John Tregoning decided to find out what he could do to make that possible. So he explored the investigations that scientists are doing into why we age and die — and tried a few experiments on himself. Bob speaks with him about his new book, Live Forever? A Curious Scientists' Guide to Wellness, Ageing and Death.

Tregoning dutifully documents everything he discovers as he undergoes testing for his heart, gets his genes sequenced, has a bronchoscopy, and follows an extreme diet, among other experiments. But he comes to the conclusion that "when it comes to improving life outcomes, exercise considerably trumps nearly everything I am planning to do whilst writing this book."

Live Forever? A Curious Scientist's Guide to Wellness, Ageing and Death by Prof. John S. Tregoning.
Live Forever? A Curious Scientist's Guide to Wellness, Ageing and Death by Prof. John S. Tregoning. (John S. Tregoning/Oneworld Publishing)