Episode 100
It's Time to Talk About the Future - Ep 100
This week, for our ONE HUNDREDTH EPISODE, Anna and Amber bend their brains around the archaeology of the future and the future of archaeology. What will excavation look like in 100, 1,000, or 5,000 years? What about human evolution? Human culture? Language? We come up with more questions than answers, and have a great time doing it. THANK YOU for getting us to Episode 100!
Links
- Chicken Bones May Be the Legacy of Our Time (Smithsonian)
- The broiler chicken as a signal of a human reconfigured biosphere (Royal Society Open Science)
- Changes in the lead isotopic composition of blood, diet and air in Australia over a decade: Globalization and implications for future isotopic studies (Environmental Research)
- Dietary Heterogeneity among Western Industrialized Countries Reflected in the Stable Isotope Ratios of Human Hair (PLoS One)
- The Future of Archaeology Is 'Spacejunk' (The Atlantic)
- The Future of Archeology Is Plastic (Medium)
- The past, present and future of human evolution (Nature)
- What May Become of Homo sapiens (Scientific American)
- Edible Insects and Human Evolution (via Project MUSE)
- Dougal Dixon - After Man (A Zoology of the Future) 1981 (Monster Brains blog)
- Man After Man: An Anthropology of the Future (via WorldCat)
- How Afrofuturism Can Help the World Mend (Wired)
- The Long Now Foundation
- What will English language look like in the future? (Oxford Academic on YouTube)
- What will the English language be like in 100 years? (The Conversation)
- Esperanto (Encyclopedia Britannica)
- Incubus (1966) on YouTube
- Hello (Adele Cover) - Esperanto version (YouTube)
- Pleistocenese: A Language of 40,000 Years Ago (Justin B. Rye)
- Futurese: The American Language in 3000 AD (Justin B. Rye)
- Beyond Biohazard: Why Danger Symbols Can’t Last Forever (99% Invisible)
Contact
- Email the Dirt Podcast
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