Ancient Pathways, Ancestral Knowledge: Distinguished Speaker Dr. Nancy Turner
October 15, 5:30pm - 7:00pmMānoa Campus, St John Plant Sciences Bldg, room 11 (ground floor)

Join us for an inspiring and thought-provoking evening. The Ethnobiology Society hosts Distinguished Professor and Hakai Professor in Ethnoecology, Dr. Nancy J. Turner, from the University of Victoria, Canada.
Dr. Turner shares her knowledge about the traditional ecosystem management of the Northwest Coast from antiquity into the future. Learn the ways in which botanical and ecological knowledge can be and are being maintained as living, adaptive systems that promote healthy cultures, environments, and indigenous plant populations. Dr. Turner has studied Indigenous peoples’ knowledge in northwestern North America for over forty years.
Event is free and open to the public, but seats are limited. Kindly RSVP to join us for a free reception which begins at 5 p.m. This event was funded in part by the Student Activity and Program Fee Board (SAPFB).
Ticket Information
Kindly RSVP for this FREE event: ethnobio@hawaii.edu
Event Sponsor
The Ethnobiology Society (Botany Department), Mānoa Campus
More Information
Coral, (808) 683-9402, ethnobio@hawaii.edu, http://EBSHawaii.org
Thursday, October 15 |
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10:00am |
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1:30pm |
American Studies Final Oral
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3:00pm |
Economics Final Oral
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3:00pm |
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3:15pm |
LiteBIRD - A space based CMB polarization experiment, Prof. M. Hazumi (KEK)
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4:00pm |
Identy Theft: Don't Be Next
Mānoa Campus, QLC 412
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5:00pm |
Taste of Manoa
Mānoa Campus, Campus Center Courtyard
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5:30pm |
Ancient Pathways, Ancestral Knowledge: Distinguished Speaker Dr. Nancy Turner
Mānoa Campus, St John Plant Sciences Bldg, room 11 (ground floor)
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6:30pm |
The UN & Indigenous Repatriation of Iwi Kūpuna & Moepū
Mānoa Campus, Room 101, KamakakÅ«okalani Center for Hawaiian Studies, 2645 Dole Street
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