• Nutrition in Wild Orangutans: Insights into Human Health

    The Houston Museum of Natural Science 5555 Hermann Park Drive, Houston, TX, United States

    Primate dietary ecologist Dr. Erin Vogel will discuss how information from diet, behavior, and physiology can help us understand how orangutans are adapted for survival in Borneo’s forests and shed light on the current obesity epidemic in modern day humans.

    $18
  • Nutrition in Wild Orangutans: Insights into Human Health

    The Houston Museum of Natural Science 5555 Hermann Park Drive, Houston, TX, United States

    Primate dietary ecologist Dr. Erin Vogel will discuss how information from diet, behavior, and physiology can help us understand how orangutans are adapted for survival in Borneo’s forests and shed light on the current obesity epidemic in modern day humans.

    $18
  • Stress and Human Evolution

    American Museum of Natural History 56 West 81st St., New York, NY, United States

    How does stress “get under the skin” to influence health? What about our evolutionary history causes our bodies to respond in this way? This talk will explore these questions by describing the biological mechanisms through which early life stress exposures influence later life biology and health.

    Free
  • Stress and Human Evolution

    American Museum of Natural History 56 West 81st St., New York, NY, United States

    How does stress “get under the skin” to influence health? What about our evolutionary history causes our bodies to respond in this way? This talk will explore these questions by describing the biological mechanisms through which early life stress exposures influence later life biology and health.

    Free
  • Making Things Meaningful in the Ice Age

    Conaway Center, Columbia College

    The arts provide a key avenue of insight into ancient human behavior and symbolic evolution. In this lecture we will review some of the evidence and analysis of how our ancestors of the later Ice Age used the material and visual world to create meanings, to develop and solidify social relationships, and to become “effective world settlers.”

    Free
  • Making Things Meaningful in the Ice Age

    Conaway Center, Columbia College

    The arts provide a key avenue of insight into ancient human behavior and symbolic evolution. In this lecture we will review some of the evidence and analysis of how our ancestors of the later Ice Age used the material and visual world to create meanings, to develop and solidify social relationships, and to become “effective world settlers.”

    Free
  • Humankind: How Biology and Geography Shape Human Diversity

    California Academy of Sciences 55 Music Concourse Dr 94118, San Francisco, CA, United States

    What effects have other species had on the distribution of humans around the world, and what effect have we had, in turn, on their distribution? And how have human populations affected each other’s geography, even existence? Alexander Harcourt brings these topics together to help us understand why we are, what we are, where we are.

    $15
  • Humankind: How Biology and Geography Shape Human Diversity

    California Academy of Sciences 55 Music Concourse Dr 94118, San Francisco, CA, United States

    What effects have other species had on the distribution of humans around the world, and what effect have we had, in turn, on their distribution? And how have human populations affected each other’s geography, even existence? Alexander Harcourt brings these topics together to help us understand why we are, what we are, where we are.

    $15
  • Science Speakeasy – Out of This World: From Caves to Space

    Public Works 161 Erie Street, San Francisco, CA, United States

    Prepare for some extreme science! First, we’ll explore the depths of our past with Alia Gurtov, one of six “underground astronaut” archaeologists who excavated the newly discovered Homo naledi fossils in Rising Star Cave in South Africa. Then we’ll explore the far reaches of our future with Ariel Waldman, founder of SpaceHack.org and author of “What’s it Like in Space?”, who will tell us what it’s like in space and share ways you can explore space too.

    $10
  • Science Speakeasy – Out of This World: From Caves to Space

    Public Works 161 Erie Street, San Francisco, CA, United States

    Prepare for some extreme science! First, we’ll explore the depths of our past with Alia Gurtov, one of six “underground astronaut” archaeologists who excavated the newly discovered Homo naledi fossils in Rising Star Cave in South Africa. Then we’ll explore the far reaches of our future with Ariel Waldman, founder of SpaceHack.org and author of “What’s it Like in Space?”, who will tell us what it’s like in space and share ways you can explore space too.

    $10
  • Science Speakeasy – Evolution and Gender Revolution

    Public Works 161 Erie Street, San Francisco, CA, United States

    This Science Speakeasy celebrates gender diversity. Explore the evolutionary origins of gender with evolutionary anthropologist Stephanie Meredith, whose fieldwork with primates has taken her to Madagascar and Ethiopia. Then learn about Bay Area LBGT History with historian and award-winning writer and filmmaker, Susan Stryker.

    $10
  • Science Speakeasy – Evolution and Gender Revolution

    Public Works 161 Erie Street, San Francisco, CA, United States

    This Science Speakeasy celebrates gender diversity. Explore the evolutionary origins of gender with evolutionary anthropologist Stephanie Meredith, whose fieldwork with primates has taken her to Madagascar and Ethiopia. Then learn about Bay Area LBGT History with historian and award-winning writer and filmmaker, Susan Stryker.

    $10