Time to Eat the Dogs

A Podcast About Science, History, and Exploration

Replay: Searching for Hobbits

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Liang Bua

In 2003, a team of archaeologists discovered a new hominin species in a cave on the island of Flores in Indonesia. The fossils were a big story not only because they were new, but also because they were so small. Homo Floresienses stood about three feet tall.

Paige Madison talks about her work at the Liang Bua cave in Indonesia where she studies Homo Floresiensis as well as the team of researchers who have worked at the cave for years, sometimes for generations. Madison is a PhD candidate in the history of science at Arizona State University where she also works with The Center for Biology and Society and the Institute of Human Origins. She writes about paleoanthropology at the blog Fossil History. She returns to Liang Bua as a Fulbright scholar this fall (rebroadcast).

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Paige Madison

 

The Psychology of Extreme Environments

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Ben Saunders and Tarka L’Herpiniere haul sledges towards the South Pole in 2013

Nathan Smith talks about the psychology of exploration, specifically the psychology of performance in extreme environments. Smith worked closely with polar explorer Ben Saunders as he attempted to ski to the South Pole and back unassisted in 2013: a recreation of Robert Falcon Scott’s tragic 1911 Terra Nova Expedition in which Scott and his party died on their return journey across the Ross Ice Shelf. Smith helped establish the research module on Extreme Medicine at the University of Exeter and worked as a senior research scientist within the United Kingdom Ministry of Defense. He is also a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (rebroadcast).

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Nathan Smith

Links

The Expedition Psychology Project (includes Smith bibliography)

In Extremis

Ben Saunders’ Website

The Scott Expedition

Time to Eat the Dogs Podcast Turns One

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Time to Eat the Dogs turns one this week. We’re re-posting a few fav episodes over the next few days to celebrate. Thank you for your ideas, comments, and suggestions. You rock, you know it, yes you do.

Lands of Lost Borders

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Kate Harris — writer, scientist, and extreme cyclist – talks about the trip she made with her friend Mel, tracing Marco Polo’s route across Central Asia and Tibet. The journey is the subject of Harris’s book, Lands of Lost Borders: a Journey on the Silk Road  (rebroadcast).

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The Identity of the Traveler

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Joyce Ashuntantang with novelist Chinua Achebe

Joyce Ashuntantang talks about her experiences as a traveler and a poet, from her childhood Cameroon to her years studying in Great Britain and the United States. Ashuntantang is a professor of English at Hillyer College, University of Hartford. She is the author of many scholarly and creative texts, including Beautiful Fire, published this year with Spears Media Press.

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Joyce Ashuntantang