Articles

Contact Kristin Ohlson for readings, talks, writing projects, etc.

Following Frank

Full Grown People, April 10, 2022

I first saw Frank when I was twelve, a jittery small-town California girl during my first week in a public school at the weedy edge of town after six years at tiny St. Thomas Elementary School.

For a Sustainable Climate and Food System, Regenerative Agriculture Is the Key

YES!, September 10, 2019

The recent report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change shows that agriculture is responsible for 37% of greenhouse gas emissions. There’s hope—and a solution.

More Than Dirt

National Wildlife, 03/27/2017

Science is showing how healthy soil can help save the planet—and how we can all help improve what lies beneath our feet.

This Kansas Farmer Fought A Government Program To Keep His Farm Sustainable

Ensia, December 5, 2016

When federal crop insurance rules stymied Gail Fuller’s attempts to innovate, he knew something had to change.

A Tale of Two Cities

American Archaeology, Fall 2016

It’s generally thought that religion contributed to political and social unification in ancient times, but research in southern Mexico indicates that wasn’t always the case.

Everything Worth Knowing About ... Animal Intelligence

Discover, July/August 2016 Issue

Humans aren’t the only brainiacs. The old myths about clever animals may have been closer to the truth than science has been for much of its history. 

Everything Worth Knowing About ... Microbiomes

Discover, July/August 2016 Issue

Invisible worlds, ultimate partners. A crescendo of evidence points to the central role of microorganisms — bacteria, viruses, fungi and algae — in the health of oceans, forests, soils, plants, humans and other animals. 

Questions of Justice

Willamette Magazine, Summer 2016

An unusual class takes Willamette students inside prison walls to discover a new perspective on crime and punishment. 

A Time of Desperation

American Archeology, Summer 2016

Research in Belizean caves has revealed paleoclimate data indicating the Maya suffered a series of droughts from the seventh through tenth centuries. The research also shows how the Maya beseeched their gods to end the droughts, the latest of which coincided with their collapse.

Dirt First

Orion Magazine, March/April 2016 Volume 35, Number 2

Rick Haney, gangly and garrulous, paces in front of a congregation of government conservationists, working the room for laughs before he gets to the hard data. The U.S. Department of Agriculture soil scientist points to an aerial photograph of research plots outside his facility in Temple, Texas. “Our drones took this shot,” he says, then shakes his head. “Kidding. We don’t have any drones.”

Science in America's National Parks

Discover, April 2016

A century ago, Congress created the national park system — and ended up preserving some of the best research sites in the world.

How to Teach Your Cows a New Trick: Weeding

Modern Farmer, January 16, 2016

Jon Bansen’s Jerseys gaze with such mild disinterest at visitors to his Monmouth, Oregon, dairy farm that it’s hard to believe they can cause trouble.

Figuring Out The Lake

art|sci Magazine, Spring | Summer 2015

Research by geologist Gerald Matisoff and colleagues assists efforts to improve water quality in Lake Erie.

The Bug Whisperer

Craftsmanship, January, 15, 2015

Mark Sturges doesn’t advertise and clients have to find him by word of mouth, but find him they do. He’s become a master of an agricultural art as old as agriculture itself: basic compost.

Turns Out, the Future of Food Lies in These Old Seeds

Takepart, November 18, 2014

Scientists, farmers, and chefs are developing new varieties of produce from heirloom seeds. It will make life better for organic farmers—and yummier for everyone else.

The great forgetting

Aeon Magazine, July 2014

Our first three years are usually a blur and we don’t remember much before age seven. What are we hiding from ourselves?

Healing Herbs

Experience Life, July/August 2014

Herbs were our first wonder drugs, and they remain powerful medicine to this day. Here are health-promoting plants to know now.

This Is Your Body on Ibuprofen

Experience Life, June 2014

How NSAIDS — nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen, naproxen, and aspirin — can cause more pain than they relieve.

The Other Bees

Modern Farmer, April 3, 2014

There are thousands and thousands of bees that are not honeybees out there, pollinating our flowers and helping plants produce food. Who knew?

Unravelling man

Aeon Magazine, April 2014

Bipolar disorder can rage through life like a hurricane. So why does the US healthcare system leave us to cope alone?

Whole-Body Psychiatry

Experience Life, March 2014

Mental health is not all in our heads. Nutrition is an oft-ignored — yet incredibly effective — way to manage mental illness, including schizophrenia.

The Cooperation Instinct

Discover, December 2012

In a dog-eat-dog world, people still cooperate, collaborate, and help each other out. Our species’ urge to work together has remained an evolutionary paradox, seemingly at odds with Darwinian theory—until now.

Seized

Nat. Brut, September 2012, Issue 1

We took our elderly father to the small California towns where our family lived – Oroville, Quincy, and Meadow Valley. What I found over and over was a rupture between memory and place, as well as a vast gulf between my older siblings’ past and mine.

Bamyan Valley

Skiing Magazine, December 2011

Two Montana do-gooders teach villagers in a remote Afghan valley to ski, make ski equipment, and profit from ecotourism.

The Dean Of Texas Archaeology

American Archeology, Winter 2011-12

Dee Ann Story became an archaeologist when men dominated the profession. Nonetheless, she made an indelible mark as an excavator, preservationist, and teacher.

Secret Ingredients

Experience Life, November 2011

Most of the processed foods we eat are studded with mysterious additives. They extend shelf life. They create exciting flavors, colors and textures. But they don’t do great things for our health. Find out which ones to avoid, and why.

The Vexing Mental Tug-of-War Called Morality

Discover, September 16, 2011

Would you kill a crying baby to save yourself and others from hostile soldiers outside? Neuroscience offers new ways to approach such moral questions, allowing logic to triumph over deep-rooted instinct.

The Loneliest Fight

Psychology Today, September 3, 2012

A person with a rare disease is doubly isolated: He or she lives with serious illness as well as uncertainty about treatment options. There is no choice for a patient but to become an expert and advocate extraordinaire.

Could Dirt Help Heal the Climate?

Discover, June 30, 2011

One of the simplest keys to fighting global warming may be right under our feet.

Making the Best of Invasive Species

Smithsonian.com, May 25, 2011

Garlic mustard and Asian carp can wreak havoc on their ecosystems, but do they have a future on your dinner plate?

Springtime Splendor in Yosemite

Smithsonian.com, May 24, 2011

As the winter snows thaw, visitors flock to the popular national park to see frazil ice, moonbows and other seasonal sights.

Queen of the Highlands

The Smart Set, March 24, 2011

Could I find the Albania that inspired a brave British woman more than 100 years ago?

A Short Walk in the Afghan Countryside

Smithsonian.com, December 13, 2010

On their way to a park built in the shadow of Bamiyan’s Buddhas, two Americans encounter remnants of war and signs of promise.

Sleep It Off

Experience Life, December 2010

New research shows that sleep significantly influences metabolism, appetite and weight management. Could getting more shuteye help you ward off excess pounds?

Herby Ohio

Perceptive Travel, August 2010

A man with a mission, with the help of a few friends, turns a 2,000–acre patchwork of forest into a home for herbs—herbs different than the smoking kind raised by neighbors.

Reading the Writing on Pompeii’s Wall

Smithsonian.com, July 27, 2010

To better understand the ancient Roman world, one archaeologist looks at the graffiti, love notes and poetry alike, left behind by Pompeians.

Just a Memory Before You Sleep Forever

Pacific Standard, July 9, 2010

In tasteful black-and-white photos, the nonprofit Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep captures the bittersweet farewell of parents and their lost babies.

Earth on Fire

Discover, July/August 2010 Special Issue

Thousands of hidden fires smolder and rage through the world’s coal deposits, quietly releasing gases that can ruin health, devastate communities, and heat the planet.

Included in Best American Science Writing 2011

The Story of Thunder Mountain Monument

Smithsonian.com, April 9, 2010

An odd and affecting monument stands off a Nevada highway as a testament to one man’s passions.

Can Archaeology Save the Environment?

American Archaeology, Spring 2010

Archaeologists are in the unique position of studying the relationship between humans and their environments over millennia. Consequently, a number of them believe their work should inform current environmental debates.

Fashion in Kabul

Perceptive Travel, December 2009

Behind the locked–down walls of Afghanistan's capital Kabul, a designer addresses women joined in the name of fashion, combining traditional Afghan motifs with modern flair in the land of the burka.

Lives: Watching TV in Kabul

The New York Times Magazine, July 20, 2009

Turning to look in a different direction after a month in Afghanistan.

A Tour of France's Cave Homes

Smithsonian.com, May 19, 2009

In Franceís Loire Valley, domesticated cave dwellings, known as troglodyte homes, offer a history as rich as the regionís chateaus.

Libraries' Surprising Special Collections

Smithsonian.com, January 1, 2009

Tucked away in libraries across the country are unexpected archives and world-class treasures.

Break the Fast-Food Habit

Experience Life, May 2008

Not only does fast food tend to be unhealthy, but some of its ingredients are downright addictive. Here's how to kick the habit.

Afghanistan's Shangri-La

Wildlife Conservation, March/April 2008

The Wakhan is Afghanistan’s Shangri-La, far from the guns and bombs that plague much of the country - an area so starkly beautiful that people in the cities sigh with longing when they hear its name.

Feast In Kabul

Feast Magazine, Fall/Winter 2007

A gracious and venerably lined great-grandmother in a sequined gown pushed the plate of snacks at me. It was a small white dish, the only evidence of the wedding feast to come. A crowd of children eyed its passage across the table disconsolately.

Poor Substitutes

Experience Life, December 2007

Low-calorie food replacements have promised to make our weight-loss dreams come true, but research indicates that these pseudo-foods rarely deliver. In fact, they may set our weight-loss efforts back.

Golf Is Great

Walrus Magazine, December 2007

The writer plays her first-ever round of golf at Afghanistan’s embattled country club, restored to a bit of its pre-war glory.

Kabul Nights

Gourmet, October 2007

Six years after the US invasion, dining in the Afghan capital proves equal parts delicious and sobering.

Included in Best American Travel Writing 2008. Nominated for a James Beard Award.

America's Appetite for Olive Oil Ripens

Christian Science Monitor, January 10, 2007

From his tasting room on the hilly outskirts of Oroville, Calif., Jamie Johannson can hear the workers picking his olives. Even when they are too far away for him to hear their voices, he can still detect the wind-chime-like clamor of them at work.

Horse Haven

Wildlife Conservation, January/February 2007

Mingling with the 500 mustangs on Dayton Hyde’s 11,000-acre Black Hills Wild Horse Sanctuary in South Dakota.

The New World

Entrepreneur Magazine, September 2006

Entrepreneurs create jobs and opportunities while making money in Afghanistan.

The Bransfords of Mammoth Cave

American Legacy, Spring 2006

A century and a half ago a Kentucky family began offering tours of an underground empire that would become famous throughout the world. Today a great-great-grandson carries on the tradition.

Burst of Energy

Entrepreneur, February 2006

Making ethanol from skunk beer? Forward-thinking entrepreneurs and their innovations  in the field of renewable clean energy. 

Three's Company

Oberlin Alumi Magazine, Spring 2005, Vol. 100, No.4

Young alums hope to take on two tough problems in the City of Oberlin: affordable housing and flat retail sales.

Big Words

Brain, Child, Fall 2004

No one was making predictions about this child's capabilities. Twenty-seven years later, his mother still gets caught off guard.

Nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Included among the notable essays in Best American Essays 2005.

Somebody's Watching You

Salon, December 6, 2003

Eight million American women—or one in 12—will be a victim of stalking at some point in their lives. So why are law enforcement agencies so inept at handling their cases?

Rush Likes It?

Killing The Buddha, September, 2003

Imagine my shock. I was sitting in my office looking out the window, when a friend called and said—very slowly so I couldn't miss the urgency—“Go to your radio and switch it over to AM and turn it to 1100. Rush Limbaugh is talking about you and your book right now.”

Greater Than the Sum of its Parts

PITTMED University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Magazine, May 2003, Vol. 5, Issue 2

Patients with the same condition may require different treatments.

It Takes Two

New Scientist, October 5, 2002, Vol. 176, No. 2363

Studying twins is still a vital tool for 21st century geneticists, even with the human genome map at their fingertips. Kristin Ohlson gets stuck into the nature-nurture debate.

Be A Man

O, The Oprah Magazine, October, 2002

They're footballers. Fraternity men. Big, burly guys like ex- quarterback Don McPherson, who's hoping to lead a new generation of men into a violence-free end zone.

Conservation Wars

Oberlin Alumi Magazine, Fall 2002, Vol. 98 No. 2

James Beck '52 leads an ardent campaign against potentially damaging restorations. Professional conservators disagree.

The Tough Get Glowing

New Scientist, January 12, 2002, Number 2325

How do you spot minute traces of chemicals in drinking water? Simple—build a fish that lights up when it swallows the poison.

Marriage: For Better or Worse

Oberlin Alumi Magazine, Fall 2001, Vol. 97 No. 2

Census 2000 data imply that marriage is waning. But the figures don’t tell us the full story. Exchanging vows is still the path of choice for many couples—those with and without the legal right to do so.

Faith in the Baby

Salon, May 5, 2001

They told me he was fine. I don't know that I ever believed them.

Rocket Science and Art Restoration

Discover, January 2001

Art Conservator Ellen Baxter was baffled. The morning after a gala exhibition opening at Pittsburgh's Andy Warhol Museum, she discovered someone had planted a kiss on a vintage Warhol painting— "Bathtub"— and left behind a full-lipped imprint of bright red lipstick.

Historians Fight to Save Cleveland’s Ore Unloaders

The New York Times, June 6, 1999 (page A 26)

CLEVELAND, OH—It may seem hard to imagine now, but Cleveland’s four Hulett automatic ore unloaders used to mount a mesmerizing show on the lake front, west of downtown. From 1912 until 1992, these 96-foot behemoths lumbered along the shore, leaning forward and sinking their jaws into the bellies of Great Lakes ships, taking 17-ton bites of iron ore and spitting them into nearby rail cars.

Biker Run Reveals Heart Beneath Leather and Chrome

The New York Times, May 10, 1999 (page A 16)

PAINESVILLE, OH—His hands held high over his head, Michael Warren jabbed at his thumb with a knife as bright and shiny as the phalanx of motorcycles that surrounded him. Some people in the crowd winced and turned away, but when they looked back again, Mr. Warren still had not managed to tease out the drop of ritual blood.

As The Suburbs Crept Out, He Dug In

The New York Times, November 1, 1998 (page A 18)

MAYFIELD HEIGHTS, OH—Even though Joseph Tomaro is the last, defiant holdout in a rural neighborhood gone urban, he enjoys the serendipitous camaraderie that commercialism brings his way. He knows the names of the office workers who walk by his house and swaps news with the merchants down the street.

Deep Pocketbooks

Ms., September/October 1998, Volume IX, Number 2

When Martha Drury’s father told her she’d find a few more dollars in her bank account —it would be $3 million, to be precise— she was overwhelmed by more than gratitude. She was also struck by a staggering sense of obligation to others and even fear of the implications of this sudden fortune.

Farmer Turns Geneticist in Quest for Black Kernel

The New York Times, May 11, 1998 (page A 10)

MITCHELL, SOUTH DAKOTA—Maybe this will be the summer for black corn. In a barn as clean as a clinic and as richly arrayed as a curio shop, Dean Strand pried the lid off an old plastic bucket labeled “black by dark red” and sank his hand into the liver-colored kernels inside.