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If These Bones Could Talk

Season 2
June 19, 2017
ep. 15 | if these bones could talk

Explorer, scholar, and 19th-century darling Robert Kennicott seemed destined to lead a full and adventurous life. Then, at the age of 30 on an expedition to Russian Alaska in 1866, Kennicott was mysteriously discovered dead by a riverside. Rumors of all colors circulated about the cause of his death, although, it wasn’t until 135 years later, in 2001, that two Smithsonian forensic scientists cracked the case.

To say Robert Kennicott left a lasting impression on the Smithsonian is an understatement. Search for his name in the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History collection records and you’ll find his handprint everywhere from anthropology to mammals. Although Kennicott’s research took place more than 100 years ago, his work still has an impact on contemporary science. The Smithsonian Institution Archives also has tons of photos, letters, and maps of his that have been digitized. Doesn’t he look like a cross between Johnny Depp and Daniel Boone?

Transcript | Credits

Kennicott in the Collections

Adze

Esquimaux Ivory Carving

Band Of Bear's Claws Head-Dress

3 Covered Fish-Hooks

Eskimo Pipe

Curved Long Handled Knife

Bones For Preparing Sinew For Bow String

Medicine Man's Bones

Eurybia sibirica (L.) G.L. Nesom

Ribes hudsonianum Richardson

Cornus stolonifera Michx.

Symphyotrichum hesperium (A. Gray) Á. Löve & D. Löve

Pipe

Ivory Polisher (2)

Harpoon-Foreshaft Barbed

Tool-Board Paint Etc.

Dress Ornament

Stone Labrets (3 Pairs)

Esquimaux Pouch (2)

Esquimaux Child's Doll Undressed

Wooden Throw-Stick

Larus argentatus smithsonianus

Pimelodus cupreoides Girard

Micruroides euryxanthus


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