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Neanderthal cloning chatter highlights scientific illiteracy

Neanderthal cloning chatter highlights scientific illiteracy | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

After spending the weekend reading blog posts claiming that he was seeking an "extremely adventurous female human" to bear a cloned Neanderthal baby - which was news to him - Harvard geneticist George Church said it may be time for society to give some thought to scientific literacy.

 

Church became the subject of dozens of posts and tabloid newspaper articles calling him a "mad scientist" after giving an interview to the German magazine Der Spiegel.

 

In the interview, Church discussed the technical challenges scientists would face if they tried to clone a Neanderthal, though neither he nor the Der Spiegel article, which was presented as a question and answer exchange, said he intended to do so.

 

"Harvard professor seeks mother for cloned cave baby," read one headline, on the website of London's Daily Mail.

 

But Church explained on Wednesday that he was simply theorizing.

David Connolly's insight:

That's what happens!

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Galen and UNC Wilmington Partner for Public Archaeology Education

Galen and UNC Wilmington Partner for Public Archaeology Education | Archaeology News | Scoop.it

Cayo's Galen University is partnering with the University of North Carolina at Wilmington for a Public Archaeology Education Program.

 

"The partnership is a public education program geared towards young minds to enlighten and introduce them to the field of Archaeology and Anthropology and encourage them to consider those studies for their future as well as to educate them about the importance of studying our history and preserving archaeological sites for future generations.  Dr. Scott Simmons of UNCW along with archaeology students Victor Cucul and Ismael Teul of Galen University served as “Ambassadors of the Past”, visiting the various schools on Ambergris Caye and talking about the history and culture of past civilizations, specifically the Maya, who were the original inhabitants of this entire region and whose impact and civilizations are still evident today."


Via Best of Cayo, Sally McHugh
David Connolly's insight:

Partnership and education!  

the way forward

David Connolly's comment, January 2, 6:30 AM
Ah ... this is exactly the sort of archaeology I love the best!