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From Foraging to Farming: How Our Skeletons Changed

Habiba Chirchir is a biological anthropologist at Marshall University and a research associate with the Human Origins Program at the National Museum of Natural History. After discovering humans had lower bone density than other primates, she set out to find out why by working with a team of researchers to examine human fossils in both the recent and distant past. Her new conclusion was surprising:  it all started when humans shifted from foraging and hunting to growing food and raising livestock - a fairly recent phenomenon in human prehistory. 

Given our sedentary lifestyles - and with food often just a click away - we need to protect our bones more than ever. Can we learn to do this by understanding our ancestors’ lifestyles? Join us as Chirchir shares her work and the new possibilities that may have contributed to lighter skeletons in humans. 

Moderator: Briana Pobiner, paleoanthropologist and educator at Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History.

This program will be presented as a Zoom video webinar. A link will be emailed to all registrants. 

This program is offered as part of the ongoing HOT (Human Origins Today) Topics series. 

 

Free. Registration is requested.

Online; Internet connection required

Signup URL

https://eventactions.com/eareg.aspx?ea=Rsvp&invite=gmr4kz5khtg25d1eggtk5...

Sponsor

Natural History Museum

https://naturalhistory.si.edu/events/foraging-farming-how-our-skeletons-...

Date: 
August 19, 2020 - 11:30am - 1:00pm

The Planetarium Lady: Eclipse program has been postponed to March 30. Registrants: please check your email for updates.