Quirks and Quarks

Oct 5: The FBI's chief explosives scientist deconstructs bomb forensic investigations and more...

Hurricanes' 'excess death' toll, NASA's mission to Europa, a tarantula's hairy defence and humpbacks' crafty tool work
Investigators stand on the street among the cordoned-off carnage from a car bomb that decimated all the vehicles in view.
A huge car bomb ripped through two bars late on October 12, 2002 on the Indonesian island of Bali. An FBI bomb forensics team, which included their chief explosives scientist, Kirk Yeager, deployed to assist with the investigation. (Choo Youn-Kong/AFP/Getty Images)

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


Hurricane Helene's killed hundreds, but the true death toll could end up in the thousands

Hurricanes and tropical storms in the U.S. kill about 24 people directly, but a new study looking at "excess deaths" suggests that in the affected areas the mortality rate is elevated for about 15 years. Rachel Young, a postdoctoral researcher from UC Berkeley, analyzed the long tail of these storms from 1930-2015. She found the true death toll ranges from 7,000 to 11,000 per storm. Her team suspects many factors feed into the excess deaths, including how rebuilding costs could impact funds for future medical care, damage to local health systems and exposure to pollution during the storm. Their study is in the journal Nature

A couple of men walk through dirt-covered fallen trees and debris with their heads down as they search for anyone caught in the storm.
A citizen search and rescue team traverses a mudslide in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene on October 1, 2024 near Bat Cave, North Carolina. (Sean Rayford/Getty Images)

A new NASA mission will search for signs of life on a Jovian ice moon

Next week NASA hopes to launch a major mission to one of Jupiter's most fascinating moons. The Europa Clipper will visit the ice moon Europa, whose icy shell is thought to cover an ocean that could contain twice the water in all of Earth's oceans. The fascination with Europa is based on the idea that water is an essential ingredient for life. As a result, Europa could be one of the most promising places in our solar system for life to exist. We talk about the upcoming mission with Cynthia Phillips, the Project Staff Scientist and Planetary Geologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

A blue icy moon stretches across the foreground, with orange gas giant Jupiter appearing in the sky behind it. A tiny spacecraft can be seen in the middle.
An artist's concept of the Europa Clipper spacecraft exploring the icy ocean world. (NASA/JPL)

Tarantulas' creepy hair is likely a defence against predatory army ants

You would think that a venomous spider the size of your fist wouldn't have too many natural enemies. But Dr. Alireza Zamani from the University of Turku, Finland says it's the arachnid's fuzz, rather than its bite that discourages predatory army ants. A new study in the Journal of Natural History suggests the tarantula's barbed hairs keep the ants from being able to attack the spiders, and also protects their eggs, which the arachnids coat in a generous helping of hair.

Tarantula
A frog and a tarantula make good housemates. (Francesco Tomasinelli & Emanuel Biggi)

Whales use underwater bubble blowing in sophisticated ways to trap prey

Scientists have long known that humpback whales use bubbles to corral and concentrate krill and small fish to feed on. But new underwater cameras and airborne drones have provided an unprecedented view of how this is done, revealing how the whales use complex patterns of bubbles in different ways depending on the prey. Andy Szabo, a Canadian whale biologist and  executive director of the Alaska Whale Foundation, said the humpbacks' bubble-nets result in a sevenfold increase in the amount of krill they gulp up per lunge. The study was published in Royal Society Open Science

A humpback whale blows out of its blowhole as it rises after constructing a bubble-net that looks like circles within circles of bubbles.
A humpback whale off the coast of Alaska blows a bubble-net that it casts to coral and concentrate krill. (Alaska Whale Foundation)

The Bomb Doctor: after the explosion this investigator seeks out evidence in the rubble

Explosive attacks often leave behind tragedy, carnage and chaos. But in the rubble is evidence that could provide vital clues for bomb forensic investigators. Kirk Yeager, the FBI's chief explosives scientist, describes his work at crime scenes as "walking into hell blindfolded." In his new book, called The Bomb Doctor: A Scientist's Story of Bombers, Beakers, and Bloodhounds, he explains how he and his colleagues tease out evidence from the scorched and smouldering aftermath of an attack. 

Several cars are on fire during the night on a street in a street ravaged by a car bomb explosion.
Buildings and cars on fire after a bomb blast in tourist site of Kuta, Bali in October 2002. (Darma/AFP/Getty Images)