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Celebrating the Liberal Arts
Harriot Voyages of Discovery Lecture Series

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2007-08 Lecture Series Schedule

Made possible by generous contributions from the Dean's Advancement Council for the Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences, alumni and friends.


Inaugural Lecture

September 27, 2007 7:00 p.m.
Science & Technology Bldg, OC-307

Peter White, Ph.D.     
Director, North Carolina Botanical Gardens

Professor of Botany, UNC-Chapel Hill
"From the Appalachians to 
the Coastal Plain:
North Carolina's Wildflowers 
and Ecology"

"Darwin called the Venus Fly Trap, native to only eleven counties in North and South Carolina and found nowhere else on earth, the 'most wonderful plant in the world.' In fact, the sandy, nutrient-poor soils of the Southeastern coastal plain support the world's richest center of unique carnivorous plants."

 

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Peter White is a plant ecologist with interests in communities, floristics, biogeography, species richness, conservation biology and disturbance and patch dynamics. In vegetation science he is interested in the composition and dynamics of plant communities, the relationship between vegetation and landscape, and role of disturbance, and the ecology of individual species in a dynamic setting. In conservation biology he is interested in the distribution and biology of rare species, the design and management of nature reserves and alien species invasions.

Professor White directs the University's North Carolina Botanical Garden, a garden which is helping to define the Conservation Garden. The Garden became one of the first gardens to enact policies aimed at diminishing the risk of release of exotic pest organisms in 1998 and was presented with a Program Excellence Award in 2004 by the American Association of Botanical Gardens and Arboreta.



Premier Lecture

October 10, 2007 7:00 p.m..
Wright Auditorium
Tickets: $10.00 ECU Central Ticket Office 252.328.4788

On-campus parking is in the Messick lot off Fifth St. Handicapped parking is in front of Wright Auditorium.

Dr. Richard Leakey
World-renowned Paleoanthropologist,
Archaeologist, and Conservationist

Professor of Anthropology, Stony Brook University


"Why Our Origins Matter"

Without the groundbreaking — and backbreaking — efforts of Louis, Mary and Richard, the story of how we evolved would still be largely untold.
Time Magazine

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Richard Leakey's Website
Royce Carlton Speaker Page 
Time 100 Most Influential People
The Leakey Foundation
Elected Fellow of the Royal Society

Dr. Richard Leakey has made international headlines for more than 30 years for his work in Kenya. One of the most controversial, influential, and inspirational figures in African politics and world conservation today, he has authored or co-authored over 100 scientific articles and books, including The Origins of Humankind, Origins Reconsidered, and The Sixth Extinction.

In the 30 years following Dr. Leakey's first expedition, he and his team of palaeoanthropologists unearthed more than two-hundred fossils, including “Turkana Boy,” a Homo Erectus roughly 1.6 million years old, one of the most complete skeletons ever found.

Renowned for his work in early human origins, Leakey became head of Kenya’s Wildlife Department and later an outspoken political outsider, to save Kenya’s natural resources, and specifically the African elephant – a crusade that set him against internal corruption, poverty, and dangerous criminals. The personal cost was high (the 1993 airplane crash that took his legs and nearly his life was likely no accident), but his love of Kenya, and his convictions about the direction of his country – and all of sub-Saharan Africa – must take to survive, have been unshakeable.


Sallie Southall Cotten Lecture

February 21, 2008 7:00 p.m.
Wright Auditorium
Tickets: $10.00 ECU Central Ticket Office 252.328.4788

On-campus parking is in the Messick lot off Fifth St. Handicapped parking is in front of Wright Auditorium.

Lisa Norling, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of History
University of Minnesota


"Captain Ahab Had a Wife"

Additional support for this lecture has been provided by the ECU History Department and the Program in Maritime Studies.

February 22: NC Maritime Museum, Beaufort
February 23: Tryon Palace, New Bern

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Professor Norling's scholarship is located at the intersection between maritime history and women's history. As U.S. history appropriately incorporates international and comparative perspectives, Professor Norling emphasizes recognizing the significance of the sailors and ships that linked America and the rest of the world for centuries. Norling's prize-winning book, Captain Ahab Had a Wife, examines gender dynamics in the American whaling industry from the eighteenth through the nineteenth centuries.

The book describes the functional interdependence of maritime men's and women's work and situates this within the ideological interdependence of masculine and feminine gender roles. Professor Norling's findings show how the dramatic growth of the industry and the restructuring of life at sea and onshore both reflected and reinforced evolving concepts about sexual difference, love, and marriage.


2008 Thomas Harriot Lecture

April 10, 2008  7:00 p.m.
Science & Technology Bldg, OC-307

Professor Mark Nicholls
St. Johns College,
Cambridge University


"Sir Walter Raleigh & the
Elizabethan World of Thomas Harriot"

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Dr. Mark Nicholls, Librarian of St. John's College, Cambridge University, is a noted scholar of the life and times of Sir Walter Raleigh and his scholar-associate, Thomas Harriot. Nicholls is the author of several important books on the era of Raleigh and the Roanoke Voyages to the Outer Banks of North Carolina.

Investigating Gunpowder Plot (1991) is a definitive history of the famous political conspiracy that landed Raleigh and a number of his associates in the Tower of London. Nicholls has also published in 2005 a new and definitive edition of George Percy's "Trewe Relacyon," a journal of events in Jamestown during its formative years . Nicholls is also the author of A History of the Modern British Isles, 1529-1603: The Two Kingdoms (1999), and a forthcoming biography of Sir Walter Raleigh.

April 11: Raleigh and the Atlantic World:  A Symposium


For more information, contact: John A. Tucker, Ph.D.  Director, Harriot Voyages of Discovery Lecture Series  A-317 Brewster Building, East Carolina University  252.328.1028



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Sponsored by the East Carolina Alumni Association

 


 
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