These ‘lost crops’ could have rivaled corn

Experimental cultivation of the "lost crops" goosefoot and erect knotweed suggests they could have once fed as many indigenous people as maize.

Talia Ogliore-WUSTL • futurity
Dec. 30, 2019 ~5 min

Coerced sterilization of Native women occurred in the 70s

In the 1970s, 25 to 42% of Native American women of childbearing age underwent sterilizations, often without consent or under duress.

Sandra Knispel-U. Rochester • futurity
Oct. 24, 2019 ~2 min


Climate change will make California wildfires even worse

Climate has been a major driver for wildfire severity in California's Sierra Nevada region, which also means that future climate change will drive

Kevin Stacey-Brown • futurity
Oct. 8, 2019 ~4 min

Native approach to controlled burns has multiple benefits

"We must have fire in order to continue the traditions of our people. There is such a thing as good fire."

Rob Jordan-Stanford • futurity
Aug. 28, 2019 ~6 min

Inuit group in Canada’s Arctic are genetically distinct

The Nunavik Inuit in Canada are genetically distinct from all other known groups, a new study finds. Some variations put the group at risk of brain aneurysm.

McGill University • futurity
July 24, 2019 ~4 min

An ancient person ate a whole rattlesnake. Why?

An entire rattlesnake turned up in a coprolite, or fossilized feces. Here are two potential explanations.

Keith Randall-Texas A&M • futurity
April 26, 2019 ~3 min

What Disney and others get wrong about Pocahontas

Who was Pocahontas? Not the "human ad" for the Virginia colony, the chaste savior of John Smith, or the Disney princess, a new book shows.

Eileen Reynolds-NYU • futurity
April 1, 2019 ~7 min

Missing muskrat ‘houses’ warn of habitat loss

Dwindling numbers of muskrat in North America aren't due to hunting and trapping, research shows, but rather drying delta.

Danielle Torrent Tucker-Stanford • futurity
Nov. 30, 2018 ~3 min


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