Adventures in the Bone Trade: The Race to Discover Human Ancestors in Ethiopia's Afar Depression
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Average customer review:Product Description
Over the past 25 years, a stream of fossil and artifact discoveries in the Afar Depression of Ethiopia has produced the longest single record of human ancestors in the world. Many of the fossils found in this region are the missing links leading to modern humans. This book chronicles the exploration of this unique desert area, focusing especially on the 1970s when the valley was mapped and many fossils and archeological sites were discovered. The author gives his personal account of the 25 years he spent researching the region.As co-founder of the team that discovered Lucy, Jon Kalb has first-hand knowledge of the research that was involved in the findings of this region and of the intense rivalry that has accompanied those findings. He discusses the political drama of Ethiopia and the effects this chaos had on the Afar. This book covers the scientific discoveries of the area, the author's own explorations and findings, and the political struggles involved with these discoveries.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1491488 in Books
- Published on: 2000-11-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 408 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
In November 1974 sixty-three pieces of bone from a small and very ancient human relative were found near Hadar in Ethiopia. They became world renowned as Lucy, some 3 million years old and at that time the oldest upright walking human relative. Adventures in the Bone Trade tells one man's story of the trials and tribulations of trying to work out the Ethiopian geological setting to some of the major anthropological finds of the century, such as Lucy. It is not the first time that Lucy's story has been told but it is the first time we have heard Jon Kalb's version. If you read Johanson's 1981 book Lucy: The beginnings of humankind, Kalb barely gets a mention and is effectively written out of the story. But as Kalb laconically quotes, "there was something rotten in Denmark", and he goes on to tell his side of the story.
Kalb, an American geologist long fascinated by the geology of the Afar region of north-east Africa, set up home in Ethiopia with his young family in 1971. As he lucidly explains, he was intrigued by the complexities of how the three tectonic plates of the region are breaking apart to form a new ocean and why the fossil remains of our early relatives are found there. Kalb's book could well have been titled Bone Wars but it has already been over-used in relation to the bitter rivalry of the early dinosaur hunters in America. As Kalb reveals in this fascinating inside story of the intrigues between the main players of the time, the competition to find our ancient human relatives has been just as fierce. With maps, photos, notes, extensive bibliography, glossary and excellent index, Kalb's compelling account is a serious attempt to set the record straight. --Douglas Palmer
Customer Reviews
Brilliant, if you are interested in Human Origins
Well written and a very human story. More importantly for ordinary people interested in human origins it is the first work I have come across which deals with the Afar in some detail without getting too technical or too boring. I feel it is likely that the answer to our evolution lies in this area and this book is a great place to start and opens up thoughts and many additional sources of information and learning.
