Quirks and Quarks

Mar 15: The silent, long-term effects of COVID, and more...

On this week's episode: polar bear dens, modern sleep woes, climate change is bad for satellites, and an ancient Australian crater

Polar bear dens, modern sleep woes, climate change bad for satellites, and ancient Australian crater

A large white bear and two smaller bears peek up out of a snowy crevasse.
A mother bear and her two cubs emerge from their den in Svalbard, Norway. Researchers were able to capture footage of the bears coming out of hibernation thanks to satellite collars and remote cameras. (Steven C Amstrup/Polar Bears International)

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

Watching polar bear mums and cubs emerge from their winter dens

Polar Bear mothers spend the winter in warm and cozy dens, gestating and then birthing their cubs, and right about now the baby bears are taking their first steps out of the dens and beginning to explore the real world. Using satellite collars and remote camera technology, researchers from Polar Bears International, the Norwegian Polar Institute, and the San Diego Wildlife alliance, now have an exciting new picture of how and when they leave their winter refuges. The team included Louise Archer, Polar Bears International Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Toronto Scarborough, and their observations were published in The Journal of Wildlife Management.

WATCH: researchers filming polar bears emerge from their dens in Norway
Greenhouse gases are messing up low-earth orbit for satellites

While greenhouse gases are warming the Earth's surface, they're paradoxically cooling the upper atmosphere, causing it to contract. And this means trouble for low-earth orbit as space junk and defunct satellites are not running into the tenuous atmosphere and falling out of orbit as fast as they used to. This is making low earth orbit more crowded, and more dangerous. William Parker, a PhD candidate at MIT, led this research, which was published in the journal Nature Sustainability.

A blue and green/brown globe with a cloud of white dots around it.
A computer-generated artists impression of the thousands of objects in orbit around the Earth (ESA/AFP via Getty Images)
Lousy sleep? It's quality, not quantity that may be your problem

Researchers from the University of Toronto Mississauga have compared sleep in modern, industrial societies with non-industrialised societies, such as remote tribes in Tanzania and the Amazon. The team, led by anthropologist David Samson, found that people in modern societies sleep for significantly longer, but have weaker natural circadian rhythms, and so their sleep is not as functional as it should be. The researchers say that could be because people in industrial societies have lost touch with cues that regulate our circadian rhythms, like light and temperature changes. The results were published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Shot of a young man sleeping peacefully in bed at home.
New research found that in modern, industrial societies, people sleep longer but less efficiently than in non-industrial, hunter-gatherer societies. (Shutterstock)
A 3.5 billion year old crater in Australia is telling the story of the early Earth

Researchers have discovered shattered rock in an area of rolling hills in Western Australia that they think is evidence of an enormous and ancient asteroid impact. This would be the oldest evidence of an impact crater preserved on Earth, and could tell us about how the surface of our planet was formed, and even how the conditions for life were created. Chris Kirkland, a professor of Geology at Curtain University in Perth Australia, was co-lead on this research with Tim Johnson. Their work was published in the journal Nature Communications.

Grey-orange rocks in conical formations
Characteristic cone-shaped rocks known as "shatter cones" that are evidence of a 3.5 billion year old impact crater in the Pilbara Craton, Western Australia. (C. Kirkland & T. Johnson, Curtain University)
Beyond long COVID — how reinfections could be causing silent long term organ damage

It's now been five years since the COVID pandemic stopped the world in its tracks. The virus is still with us, and continues to make people sick. As many as 1 in 5 Canadians have experienced symptoms of long COVID, but scientists are finding that beyond that, each infection can also lead to long term silent cellular and organ damage. David Putrino, who's been studying COVID's long term effects at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, says even mild or asymptomatic COVID infections can lead to a wide range of silent long term heath impacts — compromising our immune, vascular, circulatory, renal, metabolic, gastrointestinal systems and even cognitive function.

 A rounded cell, with hundreds of tiny pinprick virus particles on its surface
A scanning electron micrograph of an cell heavily infected with SARS-COV-2 virus (US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease)