Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: The Fossil Trail

Full title: The Fossil Trail: How We Know What We Think We Know About Human Evolution
Author: Ian Tattersall
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1.1
Genres/categories: Science, Anthology, Non Fiction

Purchase/research links:
One of the most remarkable fossil finds in history occurred in Laetoli, Tanzania, in 1974, when anthropologist Andrew Hill (diving to the ground to avoid a lump of elephant dung thrown by a colleague) came face to face with a set of ancient footprints captured in stone - the earliest recorded steps of our far-off human ancestors, some three million years old. Today we can see a recreation of the making of the Laetoli footprints at the American Museum of Natural History in a stunning diorama which depicts two of our human forebears walking side by side through a snowy landscape of volcanic ash. But how do we know what these three-million-year-old relatives looked like? How have we reconstructed the eons-long journey from our first ancient steps to where we stand today? In short, how do we know what we think we know about human evolution? In The Fossil Trail, Ian Tattersall, the head of the Anthropology Department at the American Museum of Natural History, takes us on a sweeping tour of the study of human evolution, offering a colorful history of fossil discoveries and a revealing insider's look at how these finds have been interpreted - and misinterpreted - through time. All the major figures and discoveries are here. We meet Lamarck and Cuvier and Darwin (we learn that Darwin's theory of evolution, though a bombshell, was very congenial to a Victorian ethos of progress), right up to modern theorists such as Niles Eldredge and Stephen Jay Gould. Tattersall describes Dubois's work in Java, the many discoveries in South Africa by pioneers such as Raymond Dart and Robert Broom, Louis and Mary Leakey's work at Olduvai Gorge, Don Johanson's famous discovery of "Lucy" (a 3.4 million-year-oldfemale hominid, some 40% complete), and the more recent discovery of the "Turkana Boy, " even more complete than "Lucy" and remarkably similar to modern human skeletons. He discusses the many techniques available to analyze finds, from fluorine analysis (developed in the 1950s, it
Similar books:

Bones of Contention
by Roger Lewin

The Last Human
by G. J. Sawyer

From Lucy To Language
by Donald Johanson

The Hominid Gang
by Delta Willis

The Scars of Evolution
by Elaine Morgan

Masters of the Planet
by Ian Tattersall

The Complete World of Human Evolution
by Chris Stringer

The Origin of Our Species
by Chris Stringer

African exodus
by Christopher Stringer

The Wisdom of the Bones
by Alan Walker

The First Human
by Ann Gibbons

Lucy
by Donald Johanson

Origins Reconsidered
by Richard Leakey

Blueprints
by Maitland Edey

The 10,000 Year Explosion
by Gregory Cochran

Plants of the Gods
by Richard Evans Schultes

Before the Dawn
by Nicholas Wade

Saxons, Vikings, and Celts
by Bryan Sykes

The Incredible Human Journey
by Alice Roberts

Out of Eden
by Stephen Oppenheimer