Josh Snodgrass, “Amazonians Offer Clues to Human Childhood Development”
A study of Shuar children in Ecuador provides a window into how the human body responds to infection in the sorts of conditions that shaped our species’ evolution.
Dr. Josh Snodgrass and Dr. Lawrence Sugiyama were featured in an article in The Scientist, entitled “Amazonians Offer Clues to Human Childhood Development,” about their research, the Shuar Health and Life History Project.
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- April 9, 2021:
CLLAS Common Reading Brunch with author Helena María Viramontes / Photos by Mike Bragg / Courtesy of the UO Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art
Recent Postings
- US Asylum Laws Must Catch up With the Reality of Today’s Refugees
- CLLAS Award for Outstanding Undergraduate Project
- Call for 2021 CLLAS Faculty Grant Proposals
- Remote Research: Sharing Ideas for Domestic and International Research During the Pandemic
- Grant-Writing Workshop for NEH Funding, Q&A for CLLAS Faculty Grants
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