Rooted: Where We Stand

Tattoos and microscopes. What Indigenous scientist Rosa Hunter is learning from the water

16 min · 6 de ene de 2023
Portada del episodio Tattoos and microscopes. What Indigenous scientist Rosa Hunter is learning from the water

Descripción

Take a ride on a research boat in the middle of Bellingham Bay and collect phytoplankton with badass scientist Rosa Hunter. Rosa runs the lab at the Salish Sea Research Center. It’s part of the Northwest Indian College on the Lummi Indian Reservation in Washington state.  Rosa’s been told she’s not like other lab managers. Students aren’t used to seeing someone like Rosa lead a lab – Mexican and Native, covered in tattoos. Someone who dropped out of high school and spent time in prison. But for Rosa, western science and Indigenous knowledge go hand in hand. She even had a realization that she comes from a long line of scientists, including her grandmother who would take her to go clamming on the beach. Find out how the tiniest specks of life can teach us about climate change and why “Horton Hears A Who” is the best book ever, on this episode of Rooted: Where We Stand.

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7 episodios

episode Tattoos and microscopes. What Indigenous scientist Rosa Hunter is learning from the water artwork

Tattoos and microscopes. What Indigenous scientist Rosa Hunter is learning from the water

Take a ride on a research boat in the middle of Bellingham Bay and collect phytoplankton with badass scientist Rosa Hunter. Rosa runs the lab at the Salish Sea Research Center. It’s part of the Northwest Indian College on the Lummi Indian Reservation in Washington state.  Rosa’s been told she’s not like other lab managers. Students aren’t used to seeing someone like Rosa lead a lab – Mexican and Native, covered in tattoos. Someone who dropped out of high school and spent time in prison. But for Rosa, western science and Indigenous knowledge go hand in hand. She even had a realization that she comes from a long line of scientists, including her grandmother who would take her to go clamming on the beach. Find out how the tiniest specks of life can teach us about climate change and why “Horton Hears A Who” is the best book ever, on this episode of Rooted: Where We Stand.

6 de ene de 202316 min
episode One Hell of a Spirit artwork

One Hell of a Spirit

March 22, 2014. The deadliest landslide in U.S. history hits Oso, Washington. 8 years later, we visit the neighboring town of Darrington to see how a small town has picked up the pieces, with eyes set on the future.  Take a tour through Darrington with us – from the passenger seat of the mayor’s Subaru.  We’ll swing by downtown and see the Darrington of past, present, and future through the eyes of Mayor Dan Rankin. We’ll talk to young people in Darrington who are deciding whether to leave town or stay.  We’ll pass by the site of the deadliest landslide in U.S. history, a constant reminder that locals need to drive past regularly. And we’ll cross over the Sauk River Bridge to visit the site of a future center that will produce a game-changing type of wood, cross-laminated timber. This is a story about a small town with one hell of a spirit that may give other places ideas for how to breathe new life into their hometowns.

6 de ene de 202318 min