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After the Ice: A Global Human History 20,000-5000 BC by Steven Mithen
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After the Ice: A Global Human History 20,000-5000 BC

by Steven Mithen

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Most of this book actually is written in the footnotes: while the narrative itself is a clear synthesis of archaeological data into a readable account of various world cultures after the last Great Ice Age, the footnotes provide a guide to the academic literature as it is listed in the huge bibliography and are an invaluable help in finding the best scholarship on prehistoric cultures. Maybe I spent too much time in school, but I found the back of the book to be the most valuable part of this volume. I used it mainly as a springboard to research the Neolithic Revolution in Europe, and I have to say I was very lucky to have picked up After the Ice first, as it functions nicely as a door into archaeological research of the Paleolithic and early Neolithic. Highly recommended, whether you elect to read the footnotes or not, but try them out for at least one chapter and maybe you will find them as rewarding as I have. ( )
  eriktrips | May 31, 2009 |
A very good overview of late Pleistocene and early Holocene history. It is not usually part of the context we have when we think of the past. We know we started in Mesopotamia but where and why did civilization get its start there. That is one of the questions to which this book gives background to. At first I thought the inclusion of the all seeing time traveling ghost John Lubbock was frivolous. But it did add a binding and explanatory element to the narrative. ( )
  JBreedlove | Feb 27, 2009 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0674019997, Paperback)

20,000 B.C., the peak of the last ice age--the atmosphere is heavy with dust, deserts, and glaciers span vast regions, and people, if they survive at all, exist in small, mobile groups, facing the threat of extinction.

But these people live on the brink of seismic change--10,000 years of climate shifts culminating in abrupt global warming that will usher in a fundamentally changed human world. After the Ice is the story of this momentous period--one in which a seemingly minor alteration in temperature could presage anything from the spread of lush woodland to the coming of apocalyptic floods--and one in which we find the origins of civilization itself.

Drawing on the latest research in archaeology, human genetics, and environmental science, After the Ice takes the reader on a sweeping tour of 15,000 years of human history. Steven Mithen brings this world to life through the eyes of an imaginary modern traveler--John Lubbock, namesake of the great Victorian polymath and author of Prehistoric Times. With Lubbock, readers visit and observe communities and landscapes, experiencing prehistoric life--from aboriginal hunting parties in Tasmania, to the corralling of wild sheep in the central Sahara, to the efforts of the Guila Naquitz people in Oaxaca to combat drought with agricultural innovations.

Part history, part science, part time travel, After the Ice offers an evocative and uniquely compelling portrayal of diverse cultures, lives, and landscapes that laid the foundations of the modern world.

(20040910)

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:12 -0400)

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