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0:50
The challenges of adding in or switching to a plant-based diet.

0:47
Why is the yellow split pea and its protein so small and mighty?

1:00
For Native tribes, controlled burns were banned by the government but is now being put to practice.

0:51
Denise Lajimodiere (Ojibwe) talks about the traumatic history of Indian boarding schools.

2:02
The Senate hearing and grassroots movement that led to the Indian Child Welfare Act.

0:59
What are king tides? In recent years, Boston has experienced these on land more frequently.

1:14
Jason Ivy openly talks about his genre-less music and Chicago's segregated music scene.

1:31
Rashad Bailey is a Black business owner in a majority white Chicago neighborhood.

0:50
The barrier islands of Virginia's Eastern Shore are left vulnerable to rising sea levels.

0:59
A mother talks about her son's life in Chicago and Sikeston, MO before his death by police.

8:12
Journalist Cara Anthony reveals a piece of family history that parallels SILENCE IN SIKESTON.

3:29
Did you know that Boston was once a peninsula? Nancy S. Seasholes explains how the city came to be.