Greetings–

In previous issues of Friday’s Elk, I’ve shared a number of stories about ancient DNA and what it’s telling us about our history. This week, I wrote a long profile for the New York Times about one of the most intriguing figures in this exploding discipline, a geneticist named Eske Willerslev. His story conveys not only the excitement of this field, but the powerful, complex resonance that ancient DNA has for today’s world.

 

The Talks

June 17: Austin, Texas. Public Lecture for the Stephen Jay Gould Award. The talk is entitled, “The Surviving Branch: How Genomes Are Revealing The Twisted Course of Human Evolution.” Details here

June 23-25: Durham North Carolina: International Society for Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health, Plenary Lecture. Here’s the meeting site.

June 29: Boston: Festival of Genomics, Plenary Lecture, “Tales from the genome beat: how journalists explore (& sometimes get lost in) our DNA.” Details here.

July 31: Plenary lecture at the annual meeting of the Botanical Society of America in Savannah. The talk is entitled, “Plants Are Weird: Epigenetics, Journalism, and the Alien Beauty of Botany”

September 8: University of Nebraska. Lecture: A Journey to the Center of the Brain. Details to come

January 28-29, 2017 Rancho Mirage Writers Festival
 

The End
 
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Best wishes,

Carl

Originally published May 20, 2016. Copyright 2016 Carl Zimmer.