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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Climate and the Peopling of the World
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SUMMARY:Climate and the Peopling of the World
DESCRIPTION:<p> </p><p><font color="#202020" face="Helvetica,sans-serif" size="2">The Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and the Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences welcome Peter de Menocal, Columbia University, to give a talk as part of the Harvard Climate Seminar Series. </font><font color="#212121" face="Calibri"><font face="Helvetica,sans-serif" size="2">Peter de Menocal</font><font face="Helvetica,sans-serif" size="2">, Dean of Science and the Director of Center for Climate &amp; Life at Columbia University</font></font></p><p><strong><font color="#212121" face="Calibri"><font face="Helvetica,sans-serif" size="2">“Climate and the Peopling of the World”</font></font></strong></p><p><font color="#212121" face="Calibri"><font face="Helvetica,sans-serif" size="2">One of the most puzzling questions in modern human origins has been why the dispersal of modern </font><font face="Helvetica,sans-serif" size="2"><em>Homo sapiens</em></font><font face="Helvetica,sans-serif" size="2"> out of Africa was so delayed after their first appearance in East African fossil record near  ~200 ka (ka, thousands of years ago). Fossil, archaeological, and genetic evidence indicate that early migrations into the Levant and Arabian Peninsula occurred around 120-90 ka, but the global dispersal of our kind did not occur until after 70-60 ka. New paleoclimate records and coupled climate-vegetation-population modeling constrain this narrative, highlighting the central importance of high- and low-latitude climate interactions in regulating the flows of humanity out of Africa that populated the world. </font></font></p><p> </p>
LOCATION:Haller Hall, (Harvard Geological Museum 102)
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20161102T200000Z
DTEND:20161102T200000Z
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