Event Details
When:
-
Location:
Online: Zoom
In-Person at WWU:
Academic West 204
Price:
Free
Brought to you by:
College of the Environment, The Foundation for WWU & Alumni
Description
Check out this video to watch the The Role of Geothermal Features in Human Evolution.
Dr. Medler has been working for years on his hypothesis that hominin evolution may have been influenced when our ancestors began cooking food on thermal features found near volcanism in the African Rift. Harvard professor Richard Wrangham has previously proposed that access to cooked food drove many of the evolutionary adaptations that differentiate modern humans from the other hominins found before Homo erectus approximately two million years ago. These adaptations include, among others, reductions in the size of mouths, teeth, jaw muscles, and digestive tracts. Wrangham also argues that access to the extra nutrition available in cooked food provided the energy required for the sudden 50% expansion of the brain we see with the arrival H. erectus.
However, there is little direct evidence that hominins were able to control fire at that time or that fire was a daily agent in the landscape. Medler proposes that during this time, many groups of hominins may have had access to thermal features, such as steam vents or hot springs. Such access could have provided a means of cooking food for evolutionarily significant populations of hominin long before they developed the cognitive abilities necessary to make or control fire.
To evaluate the veracity of this hypothesis, Medler and his students have developed maps overlaying hominin archeological sites over the massive lava flows occurring while these steps in our evolution were occurring. These maps demonstrate that many of the hominins were living in close proximity to long term active volcanism and likely had access to thermal features that were capable of cooking food. Dr. Medler has been presenting these ideas in a TEDx talk, at international conferences, and in speaking engagements in the US and Europe.
The Environmental Speaker Series is free and open to the public. Talks are held each Thursday at 4:30pm in Academic Instructional Center West, room 204. Join us at WWU or online on Zoom!
Featuring:
Dr. Michael Medler, Speaker
Professor
Dr. Medler received a Ph.D. in Geography from the University of Arizona in 1997, where he developed methods for using satellite data to map wildland fires and predict their future patterns. After that, he taught at the University of Oregon and Rutgers. He has now been a professor with the WWU Department of Environmental Studies since 2002. He has also served as the president of the Association for Fire Ecology, and was the founding editor of the scientific journal Fire Ecology. He has testified in congress about wildland fire at the national level. However, during much of that time he has been developing a unique hypothesis about the role of volcanism and cooked food in human evolution.
Questions and Accommodations
- Your point of contact for this event is The Foundation for WWU & Alumni. Call (360) 650-3353 or email Alumni@wwu.edu.
- Advance notice for disability accommodations and special needs is appreciated. Please mention your needs when registering.
- There will be auto-captions for the Zoom webinar.
Visitor Parking at WWU on Weekdays
- Mon-Fri, 7:00am-4:30pm: limited paid parking is available at the south C lots and north 6V and 7G lots.
- Purchase your permit at the lot pay stations or use the Parkmobile app.
- More parking details for campus visitors are available online.
Parking at WWU on Weekdays for Visitors with Disabilities
- Mon-Fri, 7:00am-4:30pm: both a WWU permit and state disability placard are needed.
- Purchase your permit at the pay stations in lot C or 6V or use the Parkmobile app (use Zone 1200). This allows parking in any disability space. If these are full, you can use a non-reserved space nearby.
- More parking details for campus visitors with disabilities are available online.
The views expressed by our speakers do not necessarily reflect those of Western Washington University.