Talks | In less than 6 minutes

Christina Warinner: Tracking ancient diseases using ... plaque

Filmed Feb 2012 • Posted Apr 2012TED2012
TED2012
  • Embed
  • Download
  • FavoriteFavorited
  • Rate

You can share this video by copying this HTML to your clipboard and pasting into your blog or web page.

560 x 315
640 x 360
853 x 480
Subtitles:
Loading …

You either have JavaScript turned off or have an old version of the Adobe Flash Player. To view this rating widget you need to get the latest Flash player.
If your browser allows only "trusted sites" to execute Javascript, you should add the "googleapis.com" domain to your whitelist to allow our Flash detection to work properly.

TED Conversations

Got an idea, question, or debate inspired by this talk? Start a TED Conversation.

Comment on this Talk

49 total comments

This comment will be attributed to . Not ? Sign Out.

Characters remaining: 2000

progress indicator

This comment will be attributed to . Not ? Sign Out.

Characters remaining: 2000

Imagine what we could learn about diseases by studying the history of human disease, from ancient hominids to the present. But how? TED Fellow Christina Warinner is an achaeological geneticist, and she's found a spectacular new tool -- the microbial DNA in fossilized dental plaque.

Christina Warinner is a researcher at the University of Zurich, where she studies how humans have co-evolved with environments, diets and disease. Full bio »

Related playlists New View more »

  • The future of medicine 8
    The future of medicine
    Curated by TED Take this tour of medicine's future with some of the trailblazing doctors charting its course. Once you've seen a transplantable human kidney...
  • What doctors worry about 8
    What doctors worry about
    Curated by TED We worry about what our doctors will tell us -- and so do they. Doctors, scientists and medical researchers weigh in on health care and better...
  • Ancient clues 5
    Ancient clues
    Curated by TED Fascinating talks by archaeologists and evolutionary biologists about humanity's beginnings and journey.

What to Watch Next

Play_icon

Paul Ewald asks, Can we domesticate germs?

Play_icon

Svante Pääbo: DNA clues to our inner neanderthal

Play_icon

Louise Leakey digs for humanity's origins

What Your Friends are Watching

Related Tags

Creative Commons

We want you to share our Talks!

Just follow the guidelines outlined under our Creative Commons license.