While enjoying light bites and cocktails, guests of the Cocktails & Conversations Series: Culture, Cuisine & Contagion: Ancient Egypt & Today event will participate in an open discussion with Dr. Sabrina Sholts, Curator of Biological Anthropology at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural Science, and Dr. Salima Ikram, Distinguished Professor and Egyptologist in exploring socio-cultural connections between health and disease, and discovering the research in genetics that has provided clues to the past.
Through the exploration of culture, exhibits, and epidemics in ancient Egypt, this exciting event will improve our understanding of the ecosystems within and around us that influence our health through a historical perspective.
While enjoying light bites and cocktails, guests of the Cocktails & Conversations Series: Culture, Cuisine & Contagion: Ancient Egypt & Today event will participate in an open discussion with Dr. Sabrina Sholts, Curator of Biological Anthropology at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural Science, and Dr. Salima Ikram, Distinguished Professor and Egyptologist in exploring socio-cultural connections between health and disease, and discovering the research in genetics that has provided clues to the past.
Through the exploration of culture, exhibits, and epidemics in ancient Egypt, this exciting event will improve our understanding of the ecosystems within and around us that influence our health through a historical perspective.
While enjoying light bites and cocktails, guests of the Cocktails & Conversations Series: Culture, Cuisine & Contagion: Ancient Egypt & Today event will participate in an open discussion with Dr. Sabrina Sholts, Curator of Biological Anthropology at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural Science, and Dr. Salima Ikram, Distinguished Professor and Egyptologist in exploring socio-cultural connections between health and disease, and discovering the research in genetics that has provided clues to the past.
Through the exploration of culture, exhibits, and epidemics in ancient Egypt, this exciting event will improve our understanding of the ecosystems within and around us that influence our health through a historical perspective.