13 episodes

I'll be interviewing specialists, leading researchers and passionate figures to find out about their field, interests and what the future holds. Dedicated to understanding humanity vis-à-vis evolution, behaviour, culture, history, and the environment.

Sphinx Thinks Georgina Holmes

    • Science

I'll be interviewing specialists, leading researchers and passionate figures to find out about their field, interests and what the future holds. Dedicated to understanding humanity vis-à-vis evolution, behaviour, culture, history, and the environment.

    From Curation to Repatriation: a Career in Osteology with Dr Trish Biers

    From Curation to Repatriation: a Career in Osteology with Dr Trish Biers

    Dr Trish Biers is Curator of the Duckworth Laboratory at the University of Cambridge. We discuss her early start in the field and where her interests have taken her - across the world in a variety of incredible positions from the Smithsonian Institute to right here in Cambridge.We cover everything from repatriation and paleopathology to advice on studying in the US vs the UK and getting into a career in osteology.

    • 46 min
    Childrearing: How Different Systems Shape Us with Dr Emily Emmott

    Childrearing: How Different Systems Shape Us with Dr Emily Emmott

    Dr Emily Emmott is a lecturer in Human Behavioural Ecology at UCL. Specialising in extended and institutional child-rearing systems (such as parenting, grand-parenting, schooling and social care provisions) and their implications for health and wellbeing (including health-related behaviours. We discuss the limitations of taking an evolutionary perspective on childrearing, the burden on intensive parent systems on caregivers, and gender differences in parental investment and offspring prospect...

    • 35 min
    Biomolecular Archaeology with Professor Matthew Collins

    Biomolecular Archaeology with Professor Matthew Collins

    Professor Matthew Collins is a Niels Bohr Professor at the University of Copenhagen and the McDonald Chair of Palaeoproteomics at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge. We discuss his journey to becoming a leading academic in the field, and his interests within the discipline.Within the world of biomolecular archaeology we track through palaeoproteomics and its applications, the integration of scientific disciplines into archaeology, and...

    • 53 min
    The Indus Valley with Professor Cameron Petrie

    The Indus Valley with Professor Cameron Petrie

    Professor Cameron Petrie is professor of South Asian and Iranian Archaeology at the University of Cambridge. We discuss his journey to becoming an archaeologist, and finding his field, as well as his present work in the region.In the Indus region, we discuss the relationship between the settlers in the past and how they interacted with their environment - as well as what this means for the future of sustainable research.Check out the website www.sphinxthinks.com for more on archaeology and an...

    • 45 min
    Palaeolithic: Mobility & Group Relations with Dr Amy Clark

    Palaeolithic: Mobility & Group Relations with Dr Amy Clark

    Movement, mobility and migration - what can these facets of human behaviour in the archaeological record tell us about our past social relationships? Dr Amy Clark - lecturer and researcher at Harvard University - joins me to discuss this topic as well as her research in Morocco. Amy discusses what the structures and spatial distributions of groups across a landscape can tell us about group size, relationships and movement. We cover what evidence is used to explore these patterns in the archae...

    • 39 min
    Primates: Cognition, Culture & Environment with Dr Kathelijne Koops

    Primates: Cognition, Culture & Environment with Dr Kathelijne Koops

    Cognition, culture and environment - how do they work together to influence primate behaviour? What can tool use and behavioural patterns tell us about primate society? Studying primates provides one of the best insights into the evolutionary origins of human behaviours. To truly understand how and why certain behaviours are adopted (and differ) in primate species, a combination of factors must be considered. If you want to learn about tool use, nesting and behavioural patterns, if you want t...

    • 28 min

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