Thousands of years ago, people crossed a land bridge from Siberia to Western Alaska and dispersed southward into what we now call the Americas. The story of exactly when that was, how they did it, and who they were has fascinated us for a long time as excavations have uncovered pieces of those stories. University of Kansas Associate Professor of Anthropology Jennifer Raff joins us to talk about her book "Origin: A Genetic History of the Americas", digging into the ways modern genetics is being used to help us understand the history of people dispersing across the Americas. Along the way we learn more about how scientists have mis-stepped in their interactions with Indigenous people, and how new partnerships are being created to more respectfully investigate this history.
#622 What's wrong Colonel Sanders? Feeling chicken?
#621 Of memoir and sea creatures
#620 The Matter of Everything
#619 Breathless
#618 This is your brain on music
#617 Emotional Ignorance
#616 The one about sex
#615 2022 Science Book Haul
#614 Clocks, Mugs and Other Nerdy Gift Ideas
#613 Pests: How Humans Create Animal Villains
#612 The Poopisode
#611 Spark: The Life of Electricity and the Electricity of Life
#610 Thieving Trees
#609 A world of universal vaccines
#608 Bone Proteins and Body Farms
#607 Shark Matters
#606 Carte Blanche: The Erosion of Medical Consent
#605 Designing wilderness
#604 Sticky: The Secret Science of Surfaces
#603 Remaking the face
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