How far back can you trace your family tree? Most people cannot go beyond their great-great-grandparents. The oldest written records recount only our most recent past. The farther back in time we go, the fewer the surviving traces. How can we know about the lives of our ancestors who lived 30,000 - or 300,000 - or 3 million years ago?
In The Extraordinary Story of Human Origins, Piero and Alberto Angela address the many difficulties and challenges in assembling a truly complete picture of human evolution. In tracing our origins, different "documents" and "evidence" must be used: rock sediments, footprints, and fossils that were petrified in the folds of the earth over the course of millennia but have become the object of scientific study only in recent decades.
To piece together the intriguing puzzle of human origins it is necessary to study all clues that are made available by multi-disciplinary research, including palaeontology, biochemistry, geology, genetics, physics, and climatology. Like so many Sherlock Holmeses, researchers seek all possible clues and analyze them meticulously in hopes of being able to reconstruct the past. Just as a cigarette butt, a hair, or a button may provide the key to identifying the "culprit" in a detective story, so can the layer of a fossil, the way a rock has been chipped, or the detail of a joint offer important information on the life, appearance, and behaviour of our ancestors. The pieces are few and fragmentary, ranging from the footprints left in volcanic ash 3.7 million years ago by hominids who walked exactly as we do, to a "Y" pattern on molars and mitochondrial DNA. But they all provide information on the diet, diseases, hunting techniques, and art of Australopithecus, Homo babilis, Homo erectus, the Neanderthal, and the first Homo sapiens sapiens.
Written in an accessible but authoritative style, this study includes many lively reconstructions of the everyday life of our earliest ancestors based on the most reliable data. The Extraordinary Story of Human Origins makes available to a wide audience a unique book inside the exciting world of research into the study of the beginnings of human life on earth.
Piero Angela, a well-known journalist and best-selling author in Italy, is also the host of a number of popular TV programmes on science, technology, and the environment. He is a staunch advocate of science literacy and a founder of Italy's Skepticism Group.
Alberto Angela, who holds a degree in natural science from the University of Rome, has also studied at Harvard, Columbia, and the University of California. He has taken part in palaeotological researches in Zaire with Noel Boaz and in Tanzania with Donald Johanson. In 1989, he participated in a study of pre-hominids in Oman directed by Herbert Thomas of the CNRS, Paris.
328 pages
ISBN 0-87975-803-1
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