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Ologies with Alie Ward

Alie Ward

Cultural Uses of Turkey Feathers

From Meleagrology (TURKEYS) with Cyler ConradMay 6, 2026

Excerpt from Ologies with Alie Ward

Meleagrology (TURKEYS) with Cyler ConradMay 6, 2026 — starts at 0:00

Today's show sponsored by Strawberry.me. Are you where you want to be in your career? Are really any of us? Super successful people have mentors. They have coaches. They have people guiding them every step of the way. That's where Strawberry.me career coaching comes in. It gives you the clarity, strategy, also accountability needed to turn your ideas and your goals into reality whether you're landing a new job maybe you're trying to advance in the job you've got or you just want to leave your field and go into one that you love more. Career coaching gives you expert guidance. You'll identify obstacles holding you back. You can develop a step-by-step plan. It's really hard to know when the right time to act on things are, when you need more planning, when to just go for it. And professional coaching helps you take control of your career trajectory. I have had career coaching, wouldn't have started Oliogies without it. And also I've used Strawberry.me to help me figure out how to make sure that I'm using my voice the most authentic way that I can. My coach was very empathetic, but also was straight talking to help me identify where I can take action. Go to strawberry.me slash ologies and get 50% off your first coaching session. So that's strawberry.me slash ologies. It's like therapy for your career. And Doug, there's nowhere I wouldn't go to help someone customize and save on car insurance with Liberty Mutual. Even if it means sitting front row at a comedy show. Hey everyone, check out this guy and his bird. What is this, your first date? Oh no. We help people customize and save on car insurance with Liberty Mutual together. We're married. Ah! Me to a human, him to a b bird. Yeah, theird looks out of your leg anyways. Get a quote at libertymutual.com or with your local agent. Liberty, Liberty, Liberty, Liberty. One thing I love about my long-term friends is I'm still learning things about them , especially if we travel together. But maybe you have a buddy that you brought on a weekend trip who you didn't know has to do scream yoga at dawn. Surprise! But verbo, verbo does not surprise you. When you book a verbo vacation rental, verbo care and 24-7 live support from real humans are included. If something is not as described or isn't working, Virbo can step in to help make it right. I don't know what to tell you about the screen yoga though Book today on the Verbo app. If you know your Verbo, terms apply. See Verbo.com slash trust for details. Oh hey, it's the middle-aged lady signing up for a flamenco class, Ellie Ward, and don't you dare assume this is an encore episode. Turkeys in May, you ask? Have you ever heard of an edit calendar? You may be asking me? I have, and I don't care. This is a natural fit for coming out in November, which is why we're putting it out in May. I want you to hear about the wonders of giant birds all year round because they're out there gobblesquawking and manipulating you every day. The sun shines and even on days that it doesn't. So we're putting this fresh brand new episode out in May. As it turns out, I've lived my life greatly misinformed about turkeys. And unless you're a melee growthist, you will also be shocked. Speaking of theology, it is impossible to say. I just tried to say it several times and had to cut out the blunders, but this term has been used exactly once as far as the literature goes, but I'm gonna stick to it. So the genus and species of the bird in question is Melagris Galopavo, and it's the turkey, and its name means literally guinea fowl rooster peacock. And in some indigenous languages, the name just translates to big bird large they are around 20 pounds in the wild 40 pounds chunkers in captivity and they're majestic with every feather so this allologist has studied them for years and they got their PhD in anthropology archaeology at the University of New Mexico, where they are an adjunct assistant professor. They've worked as an archaeologist and tribal technical liaison for Los Alamos National Labs. They've also worked as a cultural resources environmental scientist. I love this episode. I want to kiss a turkey. I shall not. But I shall thank everyone at Patreon.com slasholog ists for making the show possible. Uh you two can join it, submit your questions for the oldists for a just a a dollar month. And thank you to everyone for clothing themselves in OlogiesMerch from OllogesMerch.com. And thanks as always to everyone who leaves reviews for me to read. And here's a hot one off the press from Mega K S ninety eight, who wrote, Allie, you befuddle me. I don't know how you and your team do it, but you always manage to pull together a seamless episode with side notes that always flow into the dialogue of the episode with ease. Mega KS ninety eight, thank you so much for that. And answer your question, how do we do it? We do it by crawling our way every week to Tuesday nights. Sometimes I'm like, why don't I have a podcast where I make fart noises into a mic and like recap TV episodes? But no, I make a science podcast where I make fart noises into a mic only on occasion and I recap scientific papers about horny birds. And I hope you like this one. There's definitely some of that in there. I love making the show. I keep saying I'll make it till I die. Who knows? It might be sooner more than later. I love it. It's a lot of work. It's worth it. Also, if anyone needs episodes for kids, we have them in their own feed and they're called SMLOGES. S M O L O G I E E S. You can tell your teachers and friends with kids. Okay, let's strut ourselves out into the episode and talk turkey with an expert who will discuss if they can fly, if they like to kiss. Where did they get their audacity? Turkeys versus my car door, if they can survive a rainstorm, the deep connections between indigenous cultures and North American turkeys, gobbling, wattles, snoods, car unkles, creepy turkeys, alternate universes, why the turkeys that get pardoned don't look like the roaming turkeys that ruin your grandma's garden? If one can eat turkey eggs, where do they nest? Does a turkey have a house? What's up with a wishbone? And so many inconvenient facts that will have you questioning what you thought you knew about these so-called thunder chickens, with zoarchaeologist, turkey scientist, and meleeagrologist Dr. Siler Conrad . Siler Conrad's he him. Cool. I told my husband I was interviewing you and he was like, that's not a real name. Siler Conrad is like superhero name. Yes, yeah, yeah. Thank you. That's um I appreciate that. I've always thought that if I could have a superpower, it would be amazing to hear and talk to animals, like all animals. Can you imagine the things you would learn? Oh. So I'll take that to heart. What's the first animal you would talk to? Would it be a turkey? You know, actually it would be a spider because I need to talk through my decades-long fear of them to understand them a little bit better and apologize probably to their ancestors that I've squished many times over. So I think spiders. The spiders like, oh here he comes. Here he comes. Okay, heads up. If you have committed senseless spider side, which I suspect some of you have, please listen to our Iraniology episode with doctor Marshall Heaton, who will make you love and understand them. It has cured many an allogite's arachnophobia, for real. And if it does not, seriously, I will refund your zero dollars that you spent listening to it. But on to birds. Where my sister lives, there are turkeys everywhere, Northern California, right? Yeah. And so if you were to go , they will return your call. And I've done it a few times. Is that terrible for them? And I realize am I stressed, I'm stressing them out if I do that right. Well Well, that's a good question. I also do that, and I've never really thought about if it stresses them out. I think it speaks to this long-term connection between humans and turkeys and wanting to engage with them. And I think turkeys really want to engage with us as humans. So I still do it. Uh it might stress them out. But you know, the toms, the gobblers, the ones that are responding and kind, they love to show off and do that anyway. So perhaps they're enjoying it. They are out there, feathers out, gobbling around. I mean, I have so many broad questions. But once in my sister's yard, two tom s fighting. They had the other's beak in their mouths. They looked like they were macing on each other. Is that a fighting display, or were they maybe just uh really good friends? Yeah, I would say that's probably a display. That would be quite common. And luckily, you know, the beaks is a little bit little bit better for them than their spurs. Have you seen the spurs on their legs? No. That the Toms will have. Oh yeah. These are little daggers hanging off their legs uh that they use for defense but also you know um display and and other types of yeah when they're kind of scruffing it up to try and find a new mate, lots of different elements become involved there. Well let's let's walk back and tell me what a turkey is. Is it turkey related to a peacock because they both have big tails? Are they closer to a grouse? Like where do they live and where do they come from? So turkeys are gali forms and turkeys evolved, these galliforms, kind of these ground dwelling birds, although turkeys can fly, they evolve somewhat independently. So I would say that they're related to pheasants and grouse more closely than say a song bird, but they really have their own independent domestication. It's interesting because turkeys are really a North American bird, so they evolved here within North America. That's something quite unique. Why not so much flying? How did a bird that's so big and such a prey item evolve to be more lumbering about than soaring overhead? Or is that the big question? Turkeys, if you think about that question from the other side. What's predating them? You know, mountain lions, cougars, uh, we'll often go after turkeys, but they they're big birds, so their size is helping them. Their size is certainly helping them in the environment today, considering the types of prey and pred ators that are around. You know, a turkey, a a a tom, a male turkey versus say a household cat. I might put my money on the turkey, especially with those spurs, with the beak, you know, I mean yeah, they can easily defend themselves, especially when put in those those situations. But it's a good question, sort of thinking about what led them to this form that we see today. They were domesticated by Native American peoples here in North America, but they also have a long term evolution, millions of years of evolution within North America when there are much larger predators around. So it's a good question. So turkeys been around for tens of millions of years, and the existing species has several subspecies, but they were yes, domesticated in Mesoamerica, taken back to Europe after Spanish colonization. They became an instant hit in Spain in the early fifteen hundreds, and they made it to England. And then colonists brought 'em back to North America. Somewhere in that mishmash, someone is like, You try this new bird? I think they're like from Turkey. And then like a chat GPT fact that no one knows is a hallucination. It just stuck. The myth had wings . How are they getting up in trees and how far can they fly? So they fly short distances, but they can get pretty fast actually. So they they often like to nest in trees. Often they'll nest in trees kind of in and around water because they need water. There's a lot of insects around water that they love to gobble up, but that's a protection mechanism. So they're keeping themselves safe, their little flock of birds by kind of flying up into these trees. So that's usually the extent of their flying. But if there's a predator, they can kind of jump up and fly fly quickly. So these four foot tall feathered beanbags with legs can actually run much faster than you, up to twenty five miles an hour, and they can fly as fast as the slow lane on a freeway and as far as a football field at a stretch just enough to get out of dodge. Technically turkeys can also swim. Did you know that? I bet you didn't. And when the situation calls for it, like to save their life or maybe uh out of peer pressure on a vacation. But not not they're going across town. Yes, correct. They're not going across town. That would be quite the sight. Yeah, I'm just trying to imagine what that would look like. Okay, imagine a few dozen twenty-pound chicks They really are flying short distances. They know what they're doing. They're they're big birds and they can defend themselves and they like to strut around. I guess if they're not flying long distances, they don't uh uh migrate. Correct. They're non-migratory. Correct. And then where are they sleeping and where are they building nests? Yep. So sleeping typically in these roosts are kind of above ground. So they try and find little areas. And in fact, for the indigenous domestication of these birds in the American Southwest and kind of Mexican Northwest, they would often build roosts within like Pueblo room blocks. So these these elevated little areas, it just feels natural to them. They they feel more protection that way. So they're often finding trees, clusters of trees where they will fly up and and sort of sleep through the night and stay safe and protected. But female hens, they will nest on the ground. They'll kind of find these enclosed areas. They'll build these nests. So they have ground nests, but they like to sleep up if they can get up into the trees a little bit. Okay, so that is sleeping upstairs in a tree or perhaps in the alcoves of a pueblo, and then downstairs on the ground you got the babies. It seems backwards . Leave your delicious eggs and tiny crunchy babies on the ground. And yeah, the rates of death for hens are highest during their incubation period. But I guess it's been working for them for the last 20 million years. To be frank, it's really none of my business how they raise their children. I always wondered with a big old bird like that , do they just cling on to a branch really tight or do they just sleep without tipping over. Because if you put me on a branch, I'm hitting the ground fast. And I always wondered how how do any birds when they're roosting at night? What what does that even look like? Do you ever have to go out and do night field work? I just have no clue. I I never have. Birds are so interesting. Right. I mean, even when you look at a turkey, you immediately think to yourself, this is something from Jurassic Park. That's a dinosaur. You see the connection there, but they're able to stay balanced. It's just one of those remarkable things about turkeys. They're such amazing birds. Okay, so while turkeys are walking on their tiptoes, some scientists think that, like other tree sleeping birds, when they squat down on a branch to sleep, there's a tendon that shortens up and then it locks the toes onto the branch. Other ornithologists think that turkeys, because they have front heavy bodies, are just using their breast heft to help just balance them. But they settle in at night. Sometimes they fall prey to owls in the early morning. Apparently, if a male, aka a tom, can 't can't help himself and just lets out a morning gobbler that gives the whole roost away. Toms, by the way, also called gobblers, and in this instance narcs or assholes. Do you think that turkeys are out there helping eat pest bugs? Like are they eating ticks and things like that or worms or that is a very tantalizing question. Yes. And it gets to the heart of even how they were domesticated. So if you have maize fields, if you have corn, especially domesticated varieties, say in the past in the American Southwest, turkeys we know from various lines of evidence they were being used to eat little critters, kind of clean up areas, eat those bugs. There's a archaeologist who recently passed away, Charmian McCusick, uh, and she told me once that a I think it was in Arizona, like a fish and game officer found a turkey. Uh it had been killed, I think roadkill. It's sort of stomach was chalk full of grasshoppers. They cut it open and it was just in entirely full of grasshoppers. So they love grasshoppers. They will just kind of chow down on all of these critters. And one of the things that I think is misunderstood about turkeys is that today in these large industrial scale agricultural settings, I think the assumption is that turkeys might be a pest to those fields because they might actually eat the crops. But there's some really interesting important evidence that shows us that turkeys are actually individually eating insects and bugs. So there's quite a benefit to have turkeys around. I think they're wonderful little critters. But for your sister, perhaps for others, they're probably also eating through gardens, especially today in the West. So that has its own response. Yeah. I was wondering about that. Um my mom did some landscaping recently and she put up alarms to try to get them while her landscaping is taking root. Listen, mom, I get it. The landscaping looks amazing and I don't have to live with turkeys trying to eat my plant roots or look for worms. These alarms, they're used for deer and skunks and cats and such, feature gunshot and dog barking noises. It's intense. It's scary for wild critters and really anything that lives in America with the ballistics and the dogs. But the reviews say that they're very effective. But when it comes to some like North American history, I think some of us have heard that old story that Ben Franklin said that our national bird should be a turkey and not a bald eagle. We've talked about that in a bird episode. With American history and domestication, they were being domesticated far before we had apocryphal stories about Thanksgiving and American patriotism. And can you tell me a little bit about what drove you to study that domestication and that that role from wild to livestock? Yeah. So my background, my specialty is in zoarchaeology. So really studying identifying animal bones and shells from these archaeological records. That led me to go to grad school as at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. And my advisor, Dr. Emily Jones, who also big part of how I got into studying turkey. So there were some interesting questions with these ancestral Pueblo indigenous Native American sites within the Southwest that have large collections of turkey bones. And one of the questions, this was many years ago now, was what were those turkeys eating? Because if you can figure out what the turkeys are eating, it might give you some insight into how humans are interacting with them. My dissertation research is on Thailand, it's on mainland Southeast Asia, kind of studying hunter-gatherers and and what their diet was like for the last twelve thousand ish years. So that PhD of his side note is titled Mainland Southeast Asia in the Long Dore , a zoological test of the broad spectrum revolution in northern Thailand. And we'll link it on our website. But Siler says that they could use the same technology of testing for a geochemical signal embedded in turkey bones. And Mercedes Maitland, our lead editor with a background in archaeology, also noted that she might be biased because she bent her brain into pretzels. She says learning about stable isotopes in undergrad, but she thinks it's fascinating because of its use in understanding quote the transition to agriculture in the Americas in a way that's not possible in most other places where agriculture originated because she says corn. She elaborates that quote you can't use carbon to ID wheat or barley or rice or rye, oats, potatoes, nuts, legumes, leapy green, but corn? Yep. Mercedes, she contains multitudes and maybe some corn isotopes. You know, high fructose corn syrup. Corn is basically in everything today. So even if you have a a heavy, kind of protein rich uh meat diet, if those animals are eating corn, they're gonna have a corn signal. So you are what you eat, right ? So when you're looking at these geochemical signals and you're measuring say the isotopes of certain elements, carbon is really important. So you can pick up a plant signal from corn or from grasses . It's very distinct from say other types of plants, like say a tree, something like that. If you measure the isotopes in your bones or in turkey bones, you can pick up this signal to understand, okay, what is it eating and and what's that underlying diet like? That's so cool. Yeah. It's amazing. I it's just incredible, sort of, what different tissues and materials tell you about yourself or about some of these animals. And we thought, well, this is a really important and interesting question in the American South west, so let's work on these collections. That led to sort of a love affair with turkeys. I mean, you know, I it there's just so many interesting questions and and once you start studying turkeys, I don't really know if there's a way to stop. I haven't found a way yet. I because they just they're remarkable birds, how they interact with humans and what we're doing with them. So it led to many, many years now of studying different aspects of that human turkey relationship through time. Did you start off wanting to just dig through archaeological sites? Did you see a movie about archaeology when you were a kid? Like what led you to wanna like put on khakis and get out dental tools and start picking through things. That's a great question. What my parents tell me and what I do remember is that uh my younger sister and I uh grew up in Spokane, Washington, and from the youngest possible age I can remember, we like to dig this hole in our backyard, just a giant hole. And by digging the hole, we started to find things and I remember thinking, Oh, this is so cool. You know, just bits and pieces of oh I I remember finding a spark plug one time. So I mean something from just people living there and and kind of whoever owned the house. And so I I remember thinking that was so fun and interesting to sort of dig things up and see and understand something about what happened there. My dad likes to tell a story that I then asked if I could paint my room the color of dirt from a very young age because I just, you know, really loved I guess I didn't understand brown as a concept, but you know, I really was excited Can you paint your room dirt? You can. For example, you can take a pantone catalog and flip to color number 190914 TSX titled Fertile Soil for a paint match or go straight to the bear counter and ask for their ruddy earth fired red color. Or if you're looking for a less iron-rich look, you can opt for a paint called gardener's soil. And also if you'd like to learn more about soil versus dirt and colors of it and native culture, you can listen to Dr. Lydia Jennings' episode Indigenous Pedology, which is about soil. So if a bedroom makeover also is too much work in the Bay Area in California , they're so in need of more affordable housing that sometimes people rent out their crawl spaces. For proof of this, you can see the many news articles, like one titled, It Could Be Worse, Someone in San Francisco is charging $500 a month for a crawl space. Heads up also, um, that article's from twenty fifteen, so that place is probably taken by now. Or it's like three thousand dollars a month. But back to simpler times, childhood. But I've always just been interested in history and anthropology and and just understanding ourselves as humans and and what humans have done through time and again having a particular preference for animals. They're just amazing creatures, right? So I trying to understand how humans and animals have interacted for so long. Aaron Powell And with the Southwest and with indigenous culture in general on the continent, how far back is it estimated that this domestication and maize planting things like that went back? Is there even an answer to that? Oh yeah. There are a couple of different forms of an answer, actually. So I would say that as long as humans have been in North America, they have interacted with turkeys, and the paleontological, the fossil evidence really supports that. When you start to look at the specific archaeological context and the direct or indirect dating method s that support those contexts, we see that humans, indigenous peoples were interacting with turkeys as earliest as about 10,000 years ago. At least that's the earliest kind of direct evidence. So we see turkeys showing up in some archaeological context. These are really early, you know, sort of hunter-gatherer groups that were moving and subsisting through the landscape. But then the really critical period for understanding turkey domestication occurs roughly about 2,000 years ago. And I say that's the critical period because that's the earliest evidence we have for domesticated forms that were domesticated by Native American groups within North America. That's when the earliest evidence shows up. So we start to see all sorts of things happen in and around that time. And then really for the last two thousand years, just a kind of fluorescence of this relationship between these groups and post contact, uh as Europe ans contacted indigenous societies here in North America, that changed a lot of things as well. That influenced quite a bit. Uh but we see sort of I would just say this really long term relationship between humans and Turke ys within North America, really since uh these first peoples in North America arrived. And again, the continent of North America, it's been peopled for over thirteen thousand years. But Spanish colonization after the Columbus arrival in the 1490s introduced several million European settlers into the ecosystem here just over the next three hundred years. And it just ignited this fire of migration, colonization , and genocide that would forever change the ecology and the cultural makeup of the lands here. For more on how that works, you can see our two episodes on genocide with expert Dr. Dirk Moses or our various ology es episode covered by indigenous scholars, including Dr. Robin Wall Kimmerer and indigenous ethnobotanist Dr. Lee Joseph. We'll link those in the show notes. Now we also discuss indigenous relationships to birds in the recent strogoformology episode all about owls with Dr. RJ Gutierrez and our feathered plumology episode with Dr. Alison Schultz. Speaking of And are the feathers used for fletching a lot or or f namentally? Like do you find any evidence of that or is it mostly cooking stuff? Oh yeah. So the early evidence we have, archaeologically speaking, for humans and turkeys interacting, it seems like they were not being consumed . We see maybe individual turkeys showing up in some archaeological sites. We see perhaps turkey feather blankets that are showing up or mummified turkeys that are showing up, but really kind of sporadic low abundance. We see this evidence for humans interacting with turkeys, keeping them in captive areas. We see that there's some sort of important , for lack of a better word, ceremonial relationship. So there's a site uh in Arizona and they found a hide bag buried in the subfloor of habitation space, and then that hide bag was full of turkey beards, sort of these feathers that come out of a turkey chest. So those are from Tom, so from these male turkeys. So again, you you start to see bits and pieces of evidence highlighting that humans are interacting with turkeys, they're keeping turkeys, and they turkeys are starting to fill a role within these indigenous societies. But then later in time, turkeys continue to have this very special role in those societies, but they increase in their abundance. All of a sudden you start to see large habitation sites, multi-hundred room pueblos with plazas, you see turkey pins, you see people that are clearly eating turkeys, so turkeys with cut marks, turkey bones that are burned. You'll see sort of large trash mid in deposits that are chalked full of turkey bones. So clearly there's kind of this change over time in how turke ys were used, or maybe the birds began to take up more of sort of this human space in different ways. It's remarkable. And just a side note, I know that you were trying to visualize a beard on a bird. I get it. You're thinking like a schnauzer or a grandpa, but think of those chin wisps and then just move them down a little bit. And then move them down a little further and then down a little bit more. So yeah, a turkey beard, nowhere near its head. I don't know who named it that, but it's like a tassel of thick black hairs that sprouts right out of the sternum area. And you can discern the age of a tom by how long its beard is. Some hens also have beards. Nobody knows why, which is just another wonderful example of gender nonconformity in nature, in case you need to shut anyone up about it. But yes, according to the 1980 paper, Basket Maker Caves in the Prayer Rock District, Northeastern Arizona, published in the Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, researchers found these little bags. They were made out of whole animal hides. So picture a rodent that's been skinned, heads removed, feet still dankling on, but the whole thing's turned inside out like a little fur lined coin purse and then stuffed with turkey beards, perhaps is like a memento. So that was written about in nineteen eighty, but Siler's twenty twenty one paper contextualizing ancestral Pueblo Turkey Management in the Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, in that he revisits this broken flute cave and writes of other turkey evidence that included a basket, approximately two-thirds filled with turkey feathers, some cordage wrapped with split turkey feathers, and possible turkey bone awls or whistles. And again, anthropologists and archaeologists think that while humans were corralling turkeys into their homes or other structures to domesticate them, it may have been just to keep turkeys out of their hair and just feeding them scraps instead of letting them tear up the ground around them. So turkeys domesticating us, what you thought you knew about turkeys is incorrect You know, post contact then did turkeys start getting shipped all over and people saying you get a lot of bird for the buck, like and did they start proliferating just in the last couple hundred years? Yeah. So we did a couple of things post-contact that really dramatically altered how we understand Turkeys today. One is that when the Spanish arrived in North America, really in kind of Mesoamerica , they encountered turkeys in Mesoamerica. And I should add quickly that there were two different independent domestications of turkeys within North America. So one within the American Southwest, but also within Mexico, in the Yucatan , there's also a different domestication of innovaturkeys. So different groups within North America, different indigenous groups clearly interacting with these birds. But once the Spanish arrived, they brought some turkeys with them back to Europe. Those turkeys and interbred for a couple hundred years, a few hundred years. Then the the early colonists to North America brought back the descendants of those captive domesticated birds that the Spanish had brought over back to North America as yeah. As if it was something unique that they just only knew about, right? Yep, exactly. I and so the the farm raised turkeys today during Thanksgiving, if you go to the store, any of those turkeys, right? Genetically, those turkeys are from the stock of turkeys that was brought back by these sort of early colonists to North America. So they're really when you're eating a Thanksgiving turkey, unless you have someone in your family who, you know, killed and and hunted a wild turkey, you're probably eating a descendant of these Mayan domesticated turkeys that the Spanish brought with them to Europe and then back again to North America. And then why are the domesticated ones, why do they have white feathers typically instead of this like beautiful brownish mottled color? Do we know? Is it just for pillow making? I have a guess, you know, because of our n kind of industrialized nature of of how we're breeding birds these days, uh same with chickens. My guess is that, you know, if you think about turkey plumage and their feathers and what those feathers are for, especially display, you know, uh mating. I suspect that when you have these large sized kind of industrial scale farms, perhaps turkeys have been further sort of selected as they've been bred over time to lose some of those characteristics. I don't really know if that's true at all, but you know, say you've got a turkey farm with thousands and thousands of turkeys, if they're gonna start displaying or, you know, and often right, they're they're not keeping toms with all those hens, but it's probably easier for some of those sort of large farms to keep the birds as consistent and as non-diverse as possible, would be my guess. So I looked into this and it's sad and it's gross, but this breed, the broad breasted white , has been selectively bred to mature really fast, like commercial chickens. And they're harvested after just four or five months. And then they've bred them to have white feathers because it leaves So any stray feathers don't stick out like black whiskers on something you're about to eat. Because heaven forbid we're confronted with the notion that this animal was recently alive. I love turkeys. But I eat turkey. I'm all crossed up about it. More on that in a minute. When it comes to learning about turkeys for you, like what's been something that's been interesting turkey hole to go down? Eggs. Turkey eggs. Uh and they're eggs . Tell me everything you know. There's some really cool things with eggs. One research project many years ago that I got started on and and we've now sort of continued this research from different archaeological sites is studying sort of the inner structure of eggshells. So birds, as they form these eggs, they have these mammalary cones inside the egg. So that when the embryo, that chick is developing within the egg, acids are being secreted, they're kind of breaking down these cone structures, and that's how they're reabsorbing some of those elements and critical nutrients, right? So calcium from the egg is what's helping build those very young birds' bones, right? So they have an archaeological site and you've got lots of eggshell fragments. You can look at those under a scanning electron microscope, a really sort of high powered microscopy, and you can actually see physical changes that tell you something about, oh, I can look at this eggshell and tell you a turkey laid that egg and it was immediately cracked open. So perhaps they were eating the egg, perhaps they were using the albumin, you know, as a binder and paints. Or perhaps that turkey was allowed to hatch because they wanted to increase their flock size. And here we go. This is this physical evidence that we can see in eggshells. So turkey eggs, I think, are remarkable for what they can tell us and what information is kind of hidden within them. Are they huge? They're much yeah, they're larger than chicken eggs and uh it's probably one of the reasons we don't eat turkey eggs on an industrial scale today. Uh just their size. And turkey hens are they're infrequent layers of eggs, so they're not as prolific as chickens. Turkey hens will they'll usually lay clutches of eggs, maybe around 10, roughly, give or take, usually about an egg per day, and sometimes they'll have multiple clutches within sort of a year, but usually it's about one clutch in the wild, at least one clutch per year. Have you ever eaten a turkey egg? I don't think I have. You'd probably remember, right? Yeah, I don't think I have. So the deal with eggs is apparently turkeys make so few and it costs so much to feed a big old turkey enough to lay eggs and they don't lay a ton. So a dozen turkey eggs on the open market would cost like forty buc ks, which is much more than just buying one whole bird. So if you took those dozen eggs and you let 'em become birds, the dozen birds are worth more on the farm than they are in the carton. That's the numbers of it. I've eaten a lot of turkey. I in fact, you know it's one of the interesting things. When you start studying something like a turkey, how many years had I eaten turkey without ever giving second thought to it? You'd crack open the wish bone right at Thanksgiving, you sort of ha turkeys were just always kind of implicated in this uh sort of holiday or sort of these seasonal kind of traditions that we have, but I never really thought too much of them. And then all of a sudden I realized, uh there, was a whole world there of research that I didn't even know existed. Do you still eat turkey? Yeah. Yeah, yeah, I do. So but I don't I'm not a hunter and I have respect for people who are, but I just don't think I could ever kill a turkey. That would be a challenge for me. In fact, my own family is really not thrilled with all the turkeys similar, perhaps to your own family, uh that inhabit their yards. Uh again up here in Washington. Um sometimes we get into sort of colorful debates about if those turkeys should be there, but again, I love them so I think you know we should just let them be. I would eat it but I wouldn't I think it's difficult for so many of us. And I go through the same thing 'cause if I had to go up and kick that turkey in the stomach, I don't think I could do it. But if I had a turkey sandwich, uh I wouldn't bet an eye and I I I'm sure there are people studying the psychology of that, and that is a totally different episode that I'm super curious about. Yes. Okay . This is called the meat paradox. And for more on it, there's a 2014 paper titled The Psychology of Eating Animals in the journal of the Association of the Psychological Sciences from three Australian scholars. And it begins that most people both eat animals and care about animals. Research has begun to examine the psychological processes that allow people to negotiate this quote meat paradox. And they say that to understand the psychology of eating animals, they've examined the characteristics of the eaters, people, the eaten, animals, and the eating, the behavior. So I gotta track those folks down and do an episode. There's also plenty of books on this as well, from like omnivore's dilemma to eating animals and factory farming versus heritage breeds and smaller, more humane farms to hunting and conservation. And yeah, again, we need a whole episode on this. I always think that it's impossible to be truly vegan because just driving on roads and living in houses and displacing animals for monoculture crops, it's just a huge big conundrum in modern life. But veganism and vegetarianism certainly help and even cutting back on meat can make an impact. But this is certainly a topic that I want to explore both for myself and on the show, and also just the psychology of it, the ecological impacts. Uh tofu is also good though. I don't know. This is just like an impromptu journal entry about animal English. I'm sorry. Do you know where the wishbone is? What does this even do? Uh the furculum it's a structure I think that helps protect the larynx, the throat, uh kind of the vocal cords. Now my zoarchaeological colleagues would just be so uh underwhelmed by my response there. But I you know, i it's an interesting bone because of how it has sort of become embedded into our culture as this component of you know enjoying Turkey that you need to crack open their bones as well. I think it's also an interesting comment on the American ideal of a zero sum game where it's like you either win or you lose and that's it. Like whoever's got the bigger chunk. Yeah. And then your dreams and hopes are dashed if you don't. Exactly. Yeah. I remember I my grand mother, very, very stoic quiet woman who had eleven kids before the age of thirty, Catholic, but lived on a homestead and one Thanksgiving we asked her if human beings did they have a wishbone? And she just said, Well, I haven't cut up too many of those. That's all she said about that. I hope not. Okay, just a side note, this bone is called a furcul a and it is situated at the bottom of the neck. It's analogous to your collarbones if they had been fused in the middle. And we didn't always break the wishbone and want the best for ourselves. So Etruscans of your , they considered chickens to be oracles of sorts, and they would sun dry the wishbone after eating the turkey, and then they would simply touch it with their fingers while making a w ish. And then the Romans took that tradition to the UK and America where they decided to make it a contest. Because how can you be a have if there's not a have not? Now, in terms of like sexual dimorphism, what do the tom s have for mating and why like the neck tuff? Oh yeah. There's like a ponytail that comes out of a male's neck, and then there's all just kind of gob bling things that I understand they're like mood rings, they change color, like what kind of dimorphism? Yep. So several things. Male turkeys, toms, as they're known, right, or larger in size, not always tw ice as large, but you know, there's maybe a third larger or more. But mostly toms, male turkeys have this spur on their legs, so this sharp little kind of element. Male turkeys also more often than not, in comparison to female turkeys, have this turkey beard, kind of this tuft of hair that comes out, again, all for display. They also have the waddle hanging down from the neck, and then male turkeys have this snood, sort of that fleshy uh bit that hang s over the nose. And of course, all of this is for display. It changes colors, trying to find mates, it can change size and sort of become enlarged. And of course, you know, when you think of turkeys, right, you think of the male turkeys, like similar to a peacock, with their display feathers in uh sort of those tail feathers that are upright. So all of those elements are really to compete for mates, uh find a mate, all of that. Okay. So around the head area, you have a lot of wobbly business and the frilly flesh around the bottom of the neck that looks like if a gourd were made of blood clots is called the car uncle which seems a fitting name for it. The skin sail, the turkey neck connecting the caruncle up to the bottom of the beak is the do lap or the wattle. And then that dingle dangly thing, the most unsettling part really, it looks like uh like if emo bangs were made out of an appendix. That's called a snood. And lady turkeys, they have a little nub o' one, but males have several inches of snood like a pendulum just in the middle of their face. Turkeys, especially the males, they can puff up their chest to become larger, look more hunky, but not as much as a sage grouse who can inflate himself with I'm also curious why the grouse didn't become our turkey. You know, like why we're not eating grouse on you know certain holidays or something. So when they're displaying, when they're kind of trotting around, they will uh make their feathers sort of puff out more, right? They'll use their wings, of course they're displaying their tail feathers. But your second question, thinking about, you know, why why are grouse per,haps not? Do you under have you heard of the concept of sort of imprinting how animals can imprint? So this is something that goes to this long term relationship with humans. Turkeys will imprint on humans, especially from a young age. So, you know, turkeys will identify very closely with humans. We can interpret this in several different ways from the archaeological record and the anthropological record, because there are many stories. There's a sort of well-known turkey girl stor y that exists within the Native American cultures, especially within the Southwest. I had never heard of this Turkey Girl story, but I found a copy titled Turkey Girl, a Zuni Cinderella story. And it's about a poor girl who lives on the Mesa and she herds her turkeys all day and she doesn't have much. She's dressed in rags and is dirty. People are not very nice to her, and she understands that all living creatures have feelings and she treats the turkeys really well, keeping them safe and returning them to the safety of their cages at night. And the turkeys love her back. And when there's a dance in town, she can't possibly go because she wears tattered filthy rags. But the turkeys, they speak to her. And she's like, Oh hell yeah, you guys speak? And they're like, Yeah, totally, and we we'll give you a makeover. And then they do, and then she goes to the dance, everyone's like, dang, who's this hottie? And she dances too long and the sun sets and the turkeys are like Did she like dead ass forget us? And she's like, I did, and then she runs back to get the turkeys safely in their pens, but they're already out of there. They're like, I guess she's not coming back. And they're off, and she runs after them, but they just keep trotting ahead faster into the mountains and she loses them forever. So I was like, that's sad. It turns out also that that's just one ending. That's the Zuni version. But according to the twenty twenty two paper, turkeys befriend a girl Turkey Husbandry, Ceremonialism and Tales of Resistance during the Pueblo Revolt Era by the wonderful scholar doctor Lydia D. McNeil. These folk tales had various endings, the Zuni again being one of the less optimistic ones. But Dr. McNeil writes in this paper, which is great. In some of the tales, the heroine finds her turkeys and together they escape into quote a cave of shrines, into a better land. And in one Tiwa tale, she escapes into a lake of emergence, but without her turkeys. And then in three other versions of the tale, her turkeys fly off in the four directions without her. Perhaps they're returning to the wild, she says. But what's fascinating, Dr. Mc Neil argues, is that these turkey girl tales are, as she describes it, a previously overlooked expression of resistance to Spanish culture. And they reflect this repurposing of a Spanish Cinderella story that was told to native children. They took that and they spun it. And uh Dr. McNeil writes that these tales reflect a spirit of Pan Pueblo ethnogenesis and resistance to Spanish religious conversion efforts, along with in you know, various degrees of hope for escape. And what's interesting is she notes that eight out of the nine turkey girl tales collected are traced to Pueblo groups that joined the revolt against colonists. And Dr. McNeil touches on the gendered role of turkey domestication among Native peoples, writing that women tended their domesticated and wild turkeys. They fed them a predominantly maize diet when possible and harvested their feathers for prayer sticks and ceremonial costumes and masks. Dr. McNeil looks at the folk tale of the turkey girl as a story of revolt against the pressures to separate from the land and culture. And she says that ancestral Pueblin women across these different ethnic groups experienced a close human turkey relationship, which was characterized as a long-lasting social bond and says this is probably a result, at least in part, of turkeys imprinting on their human caregivers. You know, you can imagine that a turkey might imprint upon someone, that turkey would follow you around. They're kind of yours. It' its essentially more of a pet situation. Like there's kind of a fundamental shift. They see you and they experience you as a human in a different way. So you're there to protect them. Um it's really interesting and it's something that turkeys do and some other animals and birds do, but I'm guessing that grouse probably don't do that same sort of thing. Uh and so that might be why, you know, as we debate and think about why people domesticated turkeys, they might come around because they know there's food, they know there's a garden or a trash pile or something like that. But also they have this relationship with humans where they can handle us, we can handle them. They like to be around There's a barn that has some rescue turkeys and they I I'm told that they love cuddles. Like they are very cuddly, cuddly creatures. Yeah. Shout out to the gentle barn in Santa Clarita, California, where I hugged a turkey like a decade ago and I still think about it often. Also, sage grouse, sometimes you can imprint on humans when raised in captivity, but out there in the wild, you're off the hook. Nobody wants to eat you because you taste like sage. So keep eating the sage. But how exactly have we dug into all this history over the years? Sometimes shittily. If you think back on the history of archaeology, right, especially early 20th century, you have a lot of exploitation, I think is the right word, of native lands, of taking native lands. So in a lot of those early archaeological expeditions, a lot of that early work, all of these contexts were excavated mostly without any sort of indigenous consent or knowledge or involvement. That has changed through time for the better, which is wonderful. And it also has meant that the ways in which archaeologists, including myself, kind of collaborate with uh native communities really shapes the way that we investigate questions, but also ask those questions. So I think about this sometimes. They're not the same federal or state laws uh that say focus on animal remains to the same degree as human remains, right? But we know that turkeys are found in these same types of important burial contexts and and internments that sometimes humans are as well. I mean, some of these birds were they were cared for in their life. I mean, a turkey in the wild lives between about three to five years, give or take. Sometimes turkeys can live upwards of ten years or more. We see from the physical remains of turkeys in past Native American sites that they had healed broken bones. And they're healed in a way that shows that they survived that and they were cared for long term in life. So they had this very special relationship, something again that you might think about with with our relationship with our pets today, right? So if you're a hunter today, and this is one of the really fascinating things with DNA, you know, turkeys in the early twentieth century, they had been overhunted, overexploited by the you know westernized colonial descendant population here within North America, right? So their numbers dropped to oh gosh, uh twenty thousand, thirty thousand, roughly something like that in the wild. So they were significantly over hunted. Today there's millions of turkeys, right? But that's through successful repopulation, revitalization efforts for these birds. But turkeys from places like the American Southwest were brought to other areas, especially of Western North America, to repopulate and to sort of create these flocks uh to help their population. And if we remember back that Native American peoples domesticated turkeys, especially in the American Southwest, if we focus just on that area , some of those domesticated turkeys went feral, essentially went wild and interbred with the wild turkeys. So the DNA from those domesticated turkeys lives on in wild populations today. And then those wild populations were moved to other, especially Western states. So you might see a turkey today in Washington, in California, or elsewhere. That turkey might have a genetic signal, sort of this legacy relationship to the Pueblo I've got so many questions. Speaking of questions needing to be asked. My listeners know you're coming on and they submitted questions. Awesome. May I run through some oh yeah. Lightning roundy. Okay, cool. So patrons, they have great questions. What would we do without them? We would have half a show. But before we get to that half of the show and ask your questions about turkey vibes and brains and flimflam and politics, let's send some cash to a cause of the allogist choice. And this week, Dr. Conrad selected the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center, which is creating a living museum exhibiting the history and accomplishments of the Pueblo people of New Mexico, providing education programs that teach children about Pueblo culture and core values and connect them with Pueblo traditions and conserve thousands of works of art and artifacts from great Pueblo artists. So you can learn more about them at IndianPueblo.org. And thank you to sponsors of the show for making that possible. This podcast is brought to you by Squarespace. If you haven't heard me gushing about Squarespace for years, it's an all-in-one website platform. Whether you're trying to grow a business you have or if you're just a baby business getting started . It has everything you need. That's where I secured my domain name. It helped me build a professional site. I can update it so easily. I've been using Squarespace since before Oligies existed. 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It's this stuff I put on my face. It is from Jones Road Beauty. It's this really creamy, dewy, tinted balm. It works as a blush, works as a bronzer, works as a highlighter, also a lip tint. You just blend it with your fingers, you go. They also have this thing called a shadow stick, which is this high pigment eyeshadow. They have it in eight matte neutral shades. It's dermatologist tested. Goes great with Miracle Bomb. The reason I like Miracle Bomb is because I live in Los Angeles, which 11 and a half months of the year is a desert, or at least my skin thinks so. Little miracle bomb, boom. I used it before they even became a sponsor. So if you want makeup that brings out your natural glow instead of hiding it, Jones Road is the way to go. And for a limited time, our listeners are getting a free shimmer face oil on their first purchase when they use code OLOGES at checkout. Just head to JonesRodbeauty.com and use code OLOGIS at checkout. After you purchase, they will ask you where you heard about them. Please support our show and tell them our show sent you. My face sent you . Listen, sometimes you get out of your routine. That happened to me recently when I went out of town and I realized I forgot my ritual. Essential for women 18 plus. It's a multi that I've been taking for years. And guess who landed in another country without them? Me? Didn't feel right. They contain nine key nutrients, two delayed release capsules designed for optimal absorption. But ritual, why do I love them so much? They have a team of scientists, they poured over thousands of studies to figure out what are common gaps that people need in their diet but they don't actually consume. It's also designed to be gentle on the stomach. You can take it with or without food, which I love. Plus, I like that it looks like a tiny lava lamp. I tell you that every time, but it has these beads and oil in it. Tastes like mint. Easy down the hatch. I usually take them in the morning, and the reason why I've stuck with ritual for so many years is because my schedule's all over the place. Sometimes I'm eating breakfast, sometimes I'm running through an airport with one shoe. So instead of striving for perfect health, aim for supporting foundational health. Save 25% on your first month at ritual.com slash ologies. That's ritual dot com slash ologies for twenty five percent off your first month. Here's what I like. I like to think less and look better. Who doesn't want that? That's why every single time I record an ad for Quince , I'm like, guess what I'm wearing right now? You guessed it, I've got a Quince sweater on. Why, Allie? Because everything looks nice, it's classic, it's high quality, I feel good, and I look put together. And Quince uses premium materials like 100% European linen, organic cotton, ultra soft denim. They have great linen pants, they have dresses and tops. They start at $30. They're just effortless. Everything at Quince is priced 50 to 80% less than similar brands. They work directly with ethical factories. They cut out the middlemen. So you're paying for quality and good craftsmanship, not brand markup. Every time I go on their website, I say, oop, that's something I could use. Also, great for gifts. So refresh your everyday with luxury you'll actually use. Head to quince.com/slash ologies for free shipping on your first order and 3 65-day returns, now available in Canada too. So that's qulin ce.com slash ologies for free shipping and three hundred sixty-five day returns. Coints.com slash ologies . Okay, let's peck away at your questions. This first one is uh overdue. A few people wanted to know Melissa Kane, Lindsay Mixer, Jason Loenthal , uh, Claire, and RJ Doyge. RJ Doych asked, why are they such weird fuckers? And uh Jason Lo enthal said, Why don't turkeys give a fuck? Lindsay asked, Why are they just like that? They're so much all of the time. And Lindsay asked, no brain, but Maxed out sass. Are they are they sassy? Do they have one peanut MM in their skull? What's going on? It's a great question because I am convinced that that sassiness, you know, those turkeys, they understand us and they are resilient. I think that with whatever's going on up there in a turkey brain, they know just the right degree to annoy us , the degree that we'll keep them around, they can keep eating and kind of hanging out with us. I think they're quite clever in that way. Turkeys, I got your back. Are their brains really the size of a pea? No. They're more like a marble or a very small walnut. But science writer and PhD chicken psychologist, a good friend, doctor Jason Coleman, wrote in a twenty thirteen scientific American article titled Nothing to Gobble at Social Cognition in Turkeys that if an outsider turkey wanders into the wrong side of the forest, feathers would fly and beaks would peck. But domestic turkeys are birds of a different feather, he writes, and cites literature showing that even domestic turkeys can distinguish who's in and out of their social group. And a 2021 article in Salon titled Stupid Turkeys, scientists say that the unfairly maligned bird may actually, be stuffed with smirts. Quotes several other ornithologists, including Dr. Alan Krakower, who told the outlet that turkeys may not have the problem-solving skills of crows and ravens, but he says I'm reluctant to call them stupid. They can survive in all sorts of habitats, including cities, and make use of a huge range of different types of food. They have to do all this while navigating a complex social world. I think that if you are a big juicy ground dweller who can't fly, you better have a little attitude. Those are the ones that survived. Yeah. You know, I think the ones without as much moxie, I should say. Probably became dinner. Um, Emily Ruble wanted to know. They said one year I saw a female with teenager and baby turkeys and was convinced I was seeing a second brood that summer. You mentioned that they don't lay a lot of eggs , but do they typically mate like once a year? Do you think they're out there making more babies? It's possible. Yeah. Yeah, it's possible. Sometimes they'll have multiple clutches per year. So that would not surprise me. And it really it kind of goes down to the resources at their disposal. Do they have enough resources to sustain a whole nother clutch or the inclination to to do so? So yeah, it's possible. Lindsey Mixer wanted to know have you ever seen Thankskilling? It's a B movie. The ghost of the first turkey ever killed for Thanksgiving comes back to get revenge. Absolutely idiotic movie. Have you seen it? I've gotta look that up. Gotta look it up. I've never seen it before, but that's thank you. Thank please thank thank you for that recommendation. We'll roll some we'll roll some trailer audio. There's no such thing as an evil turkey. There's no such thing as evil turkey . Oh wait, I lie. Patron Lindsay Mixer unfortunately made me aware of this 2008 film, which uh had a budget of thirty-five hundred dollars. And if you like vintage cinema with a lot of local actors who are blood relatives of the director and a turkey puppet that seeks revenge and speaks English, as well as a lot of unsensitive language that would be best described as pre-Twitter. You can have at it. Now for a different set of goosebumps. Did you ever see a video online with turkeys who were following each other in a circle. Did thi 50,000 people send you that? Like turkeys were following each other and it seemed maybe around a dead turkey, or maybe it was like a pentagram. I don't remember, but definitely it looked like we got an accidental window into the Illuminati of turkeys, but they were circling each other. Turkeys walking in a circle around a dead cat in the middle of the row. And I'm like, I I don't know if that's just like wild It's bringing back some memories now. Oh, okay. Uh what's going on? You know, uh how are the stars aligned right now? But it doesn't surprise me. You know, some birds will birds understand especially turkeys when other birds die. So they'll kind of inherently understand that once a bird dies, right, they could carry disease or there could be some bad things that come from them. So they'll try and kind of bury them or push them away. That will sometimes happen in backyard chicken pens, that type of thing. So yeah. So that video hit the internet nearly 10 years ago, as did a tidal wave of think pieces and speculative reports, including a vice article titled Dear God, Why Are These Turkeys Circling a Dead Cat? And the NPR piece Turkeys Circling a Dead Cat are Probably Wary Not Working Dark Magic . And various biologists and ornithologists were reached for comment and they offered explanations like maybe the turkeys are alarmed or that one turkey was the leader and was keeping one eye with monocular vision on the dead cat while also maintaining a distance and all the other turkeys just kind of fell into line. Some reporters cited other videos of turkeys caught in Kholes around trees or doing a ring around the rosy around a tombstone. And other experts said, I don't really know what's going on here. It's weird. And again, this was early 2017. And one Washington Post headline unrelated read that we've quote slipped into another dimension in the Trump era. But yeah, even bird experts got the willies. You know, I'm curious. I it's so funny. I'm seeing so many questions from the Bay Area. And that's where I'm from. I live in LA now. But a few people asked about urbanization. And Sarah Jos er wanted to know, like, if you studied domestication and living among humans , but you know, a lot of people wanted to know about uh nuisance turkey populations or just how they live among people. So well, does that ever play into some of the work you do? Like how they can kind of get along around hum an populations. Yes. Yeah, definitely. Um probably the easiest way to think about it is if you look at their records over time, especially some of the earlier records from give or take two thousand years ago, human groups, indigenous peoples were quite mobile at that time. So they were moving around the landscape quite frequently. So we see that as people start to slow down, they start to build these larger areas where they're living more year-round, all of a sudden tur keys are there. Why hello there? I suspect just like we see turkeys today, even if you didn't have a domesticated turkey and you had a village site, turkeys would probably come on by. You know, they're gonna come by, trot on over , gobble, say hi, look for some scraps, probably annoy people. You know, I mean that's so the same type of behaviors that they have today. So today we s we so easily see them as that nuisance because they're they're bugging us, they're jumping on cars, they're getting in our way, you know, it's sort of this fast paced, right? Kind of everything's happening. But if we just stop and enjoy them, they're really remarkable birds. Oh, I love them. Robert IHart did ask who let the turkeys loose in California. Uh, when I was a boy, you couldn't get within a county mile of a wild turkey. Now in a residential neighborhood, I've had as many as 40 turkeys in my yard at one time. When I found one on top of my car, I declared war. Yeah. But so this person has to get them off their car. I will say I saw a turkey pecking at my car once because it saw itself in the reflection and wanted to start a fight. Yeah. I I cared more about the turkey than my car because I was like, my car's gonna be fine, but I was like, no, he's comes in peace. That's you. Exactly . You're safe. My little baby. The call's coming from inside the house. I just feel like when else do you get to see such a large wild animal? Yeah. It's so excit ing to see them at all. But I'm wondering too about in the wild, um or domestically, and maybe you saw evidence of this too in archaeological sites in terms of calling, but Anna Ward, AJ, Protect Trans Lives, and Andrew McVay, and Mare all wanted to know about disease. Like AJ asks, have Turkeys been suffering from avian flu outbreaks? Did you ever see evidence of that? Oh yeah. So I've referred a couple times to the domesti cated turkeys right in the American Southwest kind of in these were independently domesticated, but they were also kept isolated. We know this from the genetics and also from the physical archaeological evidence. Those turkeys were kept isolated from the wild , probably wild Mariam's turkeys that were hanging around. We also know from the DNA that indigenous peoples were exploiting both domesticated turkeys and wild turkeys at the same time. A lot of different reasons for that. Uh one might have been to just sort of add some genetic diversity into uh into breeding those flocks. But to get back to this question about disease, I mentioned this because the Pueblo domesticated turkey , it really disappears in physical form right around the time of Spanish contact within the kind of American Southwest and Mexican Northwest. For your listener who asked about California, we have introductions to think for that. That's why there's so many. There were introduced, they loved it out there. I it's a great environment and they can proliferate. But I we suspect that a combination of disease, perhaps introduced diseases for turkeys or just the real tragedy of the diseases that killed off Native American populations within North America, uh all those diseases. And yes, the smallpox, flu, measles, typhus, among other epidemics, post contact are devastating. Some sources reporting up to ninety-five percent of indigenous people in the North Americas, up to one hundred million people died as a result of infections after colonization. And even today , healthcare access systemic racism means that in the COVID pandemic, for example, black, indigenous, and Latino Americans had much higher mortality rates than white people. Now, as for turkeys, the poultry industry reeled from bird flu deaths with over two million turkeys killed or culled last year, five times more than 2024. That risk, though, is not the one on many of your minds. In terms of Flim Flam , oh my gosh, so many people. Sarah Joser, Michael Cross, Van Shell, Bopie, Kate F, HR, Puffin Stuff, Kylie Kat, Alison D , Lauren Kent, Mouse Paxton, Christy. This is insane. Christy Alberti, Erin Armitage, Sarah Vander Cleed. Okay . Wanted to know if you have heard about turkeys drowning in the rain, is it true? Kylie Cat asks turkeys can drown by looking up in the sky when it's raining. Have you heard of this? Okay, I never have. And I don't know if that's a good or bad thing. Like perhaps that's embarrassing. I'm I'm gagged. I had never heard this. Allison D said my dad worked on a turkey farm for a season or two when he was younger. He has a wacky story. I don't know if I can believe. File immediately under Flim Flam. He claims that whenever it rained, some of the turkeys would look up this sky to see what was happening and they would drown from, I guess, inhaling raindrops. Wow. What is happening here? Will they actually drown from looking up at the rain? Maybe that was like in a Pixar movie or something and people have just ran with it. I don't know. I'd never heard this before. It's a great question. You know, turkeys are they need water. They have to drink water, about a quart roughly per day. Wow. Turkeys also are very much associated with water uh within Native American communities. And some of the iconographic representations of turkeys. What I can say I think with some confidence is that wild turkeys are not dying in large numbers by dro wning when it rained. That's a good point. Because it rains up in northern California all the time where my family lives. And it's not like they just see mounds of dead turkeys. Yeah. Every time it rains. So yeah, just a big old load of turkey shit Now if you see one looking up in the rain, perhaps they're just showing off their face danglers or they're just enjoying the vibe. You needed to know everything about them though. Allie Brown, AJG C, Alexander Roth, Julia loves fun facts, Abdie Capello, Allie M, Nicole Kleimanan, Meg Walker, Ricky G, Leafy Green Kale, Mia W. Nikki G, Lahani, and Arella Zarina, who said I look at a turkey for a little more than ten seconds and I'm questioning my existence. Like what is it with the red thing? We did get a lot of people ask about the waddle. Oh yeah. Lauren Cooper, what's the dangle for? What does it feel like? What's up with the gobbler? I love that Caitlin Ellis said uh Loki don't know how I feel about it. Hannah E called it an aesthetic travesty that is the waddle. Do males and females have a waddle or only males? They both have the waddle, but the snood kind of hanging over the nose, uh, they do not. And uh I can really empathize and and resonate with a lot of your listeners because it's you know, when you see them you think, Oh yeah. They look a little like, ooh, all right. They're you know, that's yeah, they're hanging out there. So yeah, there's the caruncle, which is the barnacle things on the throat, and then there's the under chin waddle, and then there's that sexy snood, which is a nubbin on a hen, and a long drip of bubblegum on a tom. And since turkeys can't sweat, but they're always cloaked in a duvet of their own making, these weird dangles can release some heat for them while also bringing the heat because when excited or dressed to impress, that snood and wattle can flood with blood and turn a deep, deep hot red. But when scared it can blanch to pink or blue or white, sort of. So uh I got deep into it, and in a twenty fourteen paper, biomimetic virus-based colorometric sensors, researchers looking to biomimicry as sensors for explosive materials, discovered that this gobbler wattle is composed of a lot of collagen and a lot of blood vessels. And when the turkey feels chill or happy or is sexing you up, the collagen tightens up and the blood rushes in, creating that kind of scarlet transformation. When it's scared, the collagen bundles expand and the blood vessels are underneath all of that, kind of obscured, and the light scatters to that white or light blue. And the paper notes that these dramatic makeovers are the reason why in some Asian countries like South Korea or Japan, uh turkeys are called seven faced birds. But it's just amazing, right? If we think about the evolution and diversity of all these different morphological features and kind of what they're for. I thought Daniela Napolitano had an interesting question too. Um they said they were just down in southern Arizona bird watching. We saw a ton of wild turkeys while we were there. Someone told us that the wild turkey is super important in the history of North America, especially for arrow fletching. And that's one reason they were prized birds. But do you ever find any like evidence of feathers? Are their feathers just have a toughness that is kind of superior? They seem like if I've ever found one. Yes. So the feathers were so critically important, both for the coloration and kind of how they looked, right? But also downy feather blankets. You know, there's been a lot of research on turkey feather blankets because turkey feather blankets have been discovered in some of these very arid archaeological sites. And some of the very interesting research that's come out of that is shown that you can collect from about anywhere between four to ten turkeys, enough feathers to create one of these blankets, but those blankets have about 12,000 feathers on them. Wow. That's something that's kind of common. So we think about the reasons, right? Why did humans domesticate these birds? Well, being able to have a bird that you can keep alive for many years, you can feed it basically what you're eating. They might really like you, they might imprint on you, so you can have this special relationship with them. And as an added benefit, you get these feathers for lots of different purposes. So I uh like where am I going to find an expert on arrows and fletching and Mesoamerican and Southwestern weaponry. Oh in my phone. There's this past guest, wonderful, wonderful Angelo Robletto, who's an experimental archaeologist and one of the global experts on the spear chucking device you need to know about, which is an at-let al. And we have a whole episode with him. It's so good. And he was on hand to answer my text earlier today because he's the best. And I was like, hey, what's the role of turkey feathers and fletching? And he said, Yeah, turkey feathers are some of the most commonly used feathers across North America, and other feathers used for fletchings on arrows are eagle, hawk, falcon, buzzard, flicker, and sometimes owl, but that's very tribe-dependent. He says some tribes associate negative omens with owls. And you can see our strogoformology owl episode with Dr. Gutierrez for more on that lore. We really go into it. And historically, Angelo continues, there's indications that some tribes have used different feathers for different purposes. For example, turkey feathers for hunting arrows, and eagle, falcon, hawk feathers for war arrows because of the predator prey distinction . And he also says another interesting note, when archaeologists find arrows or atlattal darts, usually all of the feather has been rotted away except for the little bit of the quill that's wrapped under sinew, protecting it from rot. So often the researchers are trying to identify these feather types based on a tiny fragment of the feather under a microscope. So experimental archaeologists like him are working on this kind of stuff. And again, his episode on At lattles is fascinating. We also have a whole episode on raptor birds. And I will say, because of all the turkey parades through my family's yard, I have found many turkey feathers and they're so beautiful. They're like brown and cream stripes, iridescent tips, and they have a really hardy structure. And I've taken some of them off the ground and I stick the inside tube of a pen in the hollow shaft of the feather and then I write with it just to give my day a little whimsy and my life meaning because twenty twenty six. What even is it? And yes, Siler echoes that with some domestic and cultural uses for Maybe there's just a functional characteristic you want to construct and build a warm blanket. those trajectories and how turkeys are used both from the archaeological evidence and then certainly from you know modern day indigenous communities and in kind of the ethno historic record. I wonder if they imprinted on just individuals and then they hated other people that were living in that community like possible. Kate with cats, first time question asker, said, uh I lived in Davis during my undergrad years. That's Northern California. And we had some notorious wild turkeys that would migrate through town each year, wreaking havoc on pedestrians. Local police put up posters warning people to cross the road and avoid them at all possible opportunity. But I saw many people chased and pecked at for simply walking down the sidewalk. Um do they tend to get territorial, do you think? Yeah, and especially the toms because they're out there trying to find mates, right, and kind of keep their little flocks uh together. So, you know, turkeys are probably pushing it at this point. They might not fully understand that and again, we have ourselves to blame. We introduced or sort of reintroduced these turkeys back into some of these environments. And we know from the paleontological record there are turkeys from the Labrea tar pits. There's actually probably a kind of a specific California species or subspecies, you know, up for debate. But understanding that evolutionary history, there used to be turkeys in California, then they essentially went loc ally extinct, but then we we brought them back in mostly for hunters and other things like that. So you know, yeah, someone asked about that, like Hi, Ollie John guys in California where we are overrun with wild turkeys. My understanding is they were brought to California in the fifties by hunters. Wondering if that is accurate. Okay, stop. So there was a wild California region turkey. It's called the Malaagris Californicus. And yes, it's been extinct for 10,000 years. So the turkeys that I love, the ones I see all the time, are an entirely different species. They're essentially feathered feral cats. Or if you listen to our Columb ology episode with Rosemary Moscow, they're like pigeons. Say it isn't so. Yeah, that's true. Yeah. There is a big effort at the federal scale to reintroduce and try and protect and kind of revitalize these turkey populations that have been significantly overhunted and kind of habitat destruction, that that story, right, that existed uh for many different animals during that time period. There is a video that some of your listeners might be interested in, I believe there was something like a turkey cannon that was developed. It's a cannon that shoots a giant net, because they needed to figure out ways to capture these turkeys, sort of in, you know, sufficient enough numbers. I I it there's a portion of my memory that is sort of visualizing this video I watched to some point. But things like that, you know, they had to sort of find ways to collect these turkeys and they collected them from the different subspecies in different populations throughout the United States and then just trans planted them into different areas. Washington, California are kind of infamous for that because they're so resilient and they've just proliferated in those environments. I had no idea. I it's so funny too, because being from Northern Califor nia myself, where we have a lot of turkeys, I thought there were this many turkeys all over. I thought everyone had 40 turkeys trying to mate with their car bumper. Like I I didn't know that was I didn't know that was just a perk of living in Northern California. I miss them living in Southern California. I mean I whenever I see one I'm just thrilled. I'm so thrilled. It's like a parade going through the driveway. Exactly. And I have to send you this video of them kissing. They're definitely fighting, but they do look like they've been caught canoodling, which is amazing. You can stay tuned for a song at the end, which was written and performed by Jared Sleeper. And yes, males do hold each other's beaks in their mouths. They're locked in this undulating battle for control to establish rank. Sometimes they nibble each other's fleshy little snood and the hens and the flock watch on like it's a mud wrestling competition. That's also a presidential election. Is there any flim flam about turkeys that you really want to bust? Or are there any pop cultural turkeys that you feel like really get it right? Or any miss that you're like, that is not true. Okay. Two things come immediately to mind. Oh, and maybe a third one. That's harum. Okay, so uh the first one, I think my most favorite kind of reference in pop culture to a turkey is in Christmas vacation . Catherine, this turkey tastes half as good as it looks. I think we're all in for a very big treat. Save the neck for me, Clark. When of course they're making the Christmas turkey and it like explodes open in this say no more. No, I know exactly what you mean. Just remarkable. You know, and for a long time I thought, oh, someday I've got to write something about how that turkey, the DNA, is probably related, right, to these indigenously domesticated turkeys. And oh you can tell by the structure of the bones and we know from their domestication it's probably a hen that they were chopping it right. There's all these different things that that turkey just kind of represents. I so that is the one I always think about. But I should let you describe that. I said say no more when I should have said say everything. It is a tur key comes out of the oven. They go to cut the turkey. Yeah. How would you describe it? I think it's been clearly overcooked, if I'm remembering right from the movie, it's sort of overcooked it it kind of explodes and deflates at the same time, right? It makes this hissing noise. I mean for a while I wanted to track down like who from the props department could tell me. Like, how did they build that turkey? Did they what you know? What was the I you know, there's there's a lot of ways you can go down that path. It was a beautifully browned crisp skin. And then when they cut open into it it was hollow it there was like hollowed smoke and tendons and bones as though the inside had been cremated. Exactly. So I will look up who the prop person was. Okay. So his favorite pop culture reference to a turkey is this indelible culinary scene from National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation. So memorable. I looked up every person on IMDB in special effects and props, and I could find no info on the making of. I Googled them all. I found obituaries, I found LinkedIns, I found no mention of the making of this bird. So then I called the wonderful LA video rental store Videots and I rented a copy of the Blu-ray of this film, which had commentary from various actors and the director. And um I fast-forwarded this scene to get some BTS of how this dummy bird was crafted and what hydraulics or robotics or smoke were necessary to pull it off. And um when I got to that scene, all I got were the actors just sitting in silence other than laughing. One of them said poof when the smoke came up. So you guys I tried. I tried so hard. If you know someone who knows someone who made that incinerated turkey and Christmas vacation, like reach out. I'm not gonna be sleeping until I know more. So I always think about that one. But the the one thing to correct, which and I feel bad being the bearer of bearer of bad news here. So this Benjamin Franklin story. Yes. If you dive into that record, it's essentially not true. So he he wrote to I believe it was his daughter, and he was kind of just ruminating on turkeys, and he was describing maybe as a as a joke, uh again, there's you can read the letter today, but he basically described how I think one of the state seals, maybe it was of Connecticut, but that it sort of looked not like an eagle, but like a turkey. So he sort of made this joke. But he never actually said it should be or or pitched that idea now several hundred years later, I think it's an amazing idea. Right? I mean, what a remarkable bird from North America, domesticated here in North America. It should have a very important place. You know, nothing against eagles. Al asomazing birds and they have this significance, but turkeys, gosh. I I think we we need to revitalize their kind of experience here. It'd be wonderful to see. I'm all for good turkey PR. Yes, exactly. So that's a massive flimflam. How do you feel about the one turkey being pardoned every year? It to me, it only highlights all the turkeys that didn't get pardoned. And also the modern issue of who gets pardoned in America is contentious. And it is you're like one turkey gets pardoned, but exactly. You can get pardoned for much

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