Austen Atkinson
Author of Lost Civilizations: Rediscovering Ancient Sites Through New Technology
About the Author
Works by Austen Atkinson
Het beheer van de aarde 2 copies
Impact Earth 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- professor
- Organizations
- University of Sunderland
Members
Reviews
A coffee table-style book showcasing the ruins of great, vanished civilizations from Machu Picchu to Pompeii to Angkor Wat. For each site there are a few pages describing the culture and history of the people who lived there, sometimes along with a discussion of how the ruins where discovered and excavated. These generally convey little more than a broad overview, of course, and the writing style sometimes makes me feel as if I'm reading text off a museum exhibit, but they do feature some show more interesting details. The color pictures, which include photos of ruins and artifacts as well as a few computer-aided artists' reconstructions of what the sites might have looked like in their heyday, are generally much more effective at exciting the imagination, though. Oddly enough, despite the title, there isn't really all that much about the use of new technologies in archeology. There are a few pages in the introduction about remote sensing, and a few more mentions in the sidebars featuring quotes from archaeologists that accompany each chapter, but generally there's at most a short concluding paragraph or two saying something like, "and today we're using new techniques to learn more."
I did have to roll my eyes a little at the inclusion of a section on Atlantis, although at least the discussion of it is sane. Mostly it boils down to something like, "If Plato didn't just make the whole thing up -- which it's fairly likely he did -- then maybe it was inspired by the island of Thera. Or maybe not." Yeah, OK, whatever.
Considerably more bothersome is the fact that there's some kind of formatting or editing problem affecting a couple of paragraphs in the first section, on the Anasazi culture of the American southwest. At least several lines of the text appear to be missing and/or garbled, making a fair chunk of it effectively unreadable. I find this particularly irritating, because the Anasazi ruins are the only ones in the book that I've actually visited, and I was hoping to see a good writeup on them. show less
I did have to roll my eyes a little at the inclusion of a section on Atlantis, although at least the discussion of it is sane. Mostly it boils down to something like, "If Plato didn't just make the whole thing up -- which it's fairly likely he did -- then maybe it was inspired by the island of Thera. Or maybe not." Yeah, OK, whatever.
Considerably more bothersome is the fact that there's some kind of formatting or editing problem affecting a couple of paragraphs in the first section, on the Anasazi culture of the American southwest. At least several lines of the text appear to be missing and/or garbled, making a fair chunk of it effectively unreadable. I find this particularly irritating, because the Anasazi ruins are the only ones in the book that I've actually visited, and I was hoping to see a good writeup on them. show less
Right after Jubilee, the best Big Finish Who story I've heard so far, here is the worst one. Erimem gets sexually assaulted. Peri has a couple gratuitous nude scenes and a lot of cringeworthy lines which I assume the writer found titillating. There's a lot of violence but the plot isn't too clear. The scene changes are hard to follow, partly thanks to the writing and partly thanks to the sound design.
In impact earth, Austen Atkinson not only highlights the threat of a major collision. He also exposes evidence of an international conspiracy to conceal the danger of the major impact phenomenon and looks at the ways in which we can try to avert disaster
Five, Peri and Erimem, rather incoherent plot with witches and planetary invasion, nice touch with the cat at the end.
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Statistics
- Works
- 7
- Members
- 135
- Popularity
- #150,830
- Rating
- 2.7
- Reviews
- 7
- ISBNs
- 13
- Languages
- 2




