
In Our Time: History The Columbian Exchange
21 snips
Mar 26, 2026 Mark Maslin, Earth system scientist linking historical events to climate; John Lindo, ancient DNA specialist studying disease and population history in the Americas; Rebecca Earle, historian of early modern Atlantic food and diet. They trace the post-1492 flows of crops, livestock and pathogens. Conversations cover dramatic Indigenous population collapse, global spread of New World foods, livestock-driven landscape change, and disease transfers reshaping societies.
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Bring Familiar Foods To Preserve Health And Identity
- When traveling or colonizing, Europeans deliberately brought familiar seeds and livestock to preserve bodily health and cultural identity.
- Rebecca Earle links this to early modern theories of constitution and climate, which made food a preventive technology.
American Staples Remade Global Diets
- Staple New World foods (potatoes, maize, cassava, chili peppers, tomatoes) transformed global diets and enabled population growth in Europe, Africa, and Asia.
- Rebecca Earle and Mark Maslin note maize and cassava became core staples in Africa, and chilies reshaped South and East Asian cuisines.
Precontact Americas Had Endemic Pathogens
- Ancient Americas had endemic diseases and pathogens before 1492, including a distinct tuberculosis lineage and H. pylori, revealed by skeletal evidence and ancient DNA.
- John Lindo explains some treponemal infections existed pre-contact but likely differed in transmission and strain from modern venereal syphilis.














