Atlas of a Lost World

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Atlas of a Lost World

Atlas of a Lost World


Atlas of a Lost World


PDF Ebook Atlas of a Lost World

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Atlas of a Lost World

From the author of Apocalyptic Planet, an unsparing, vivid, revelatory travelogue through prehistory that traces the arrival of the First People in North America 20,000 years ago and the artifacts that enable us to imagine their lives and fates.

Scientists squabble over the locations and dates for human arrival in the New World. The first explorers were few, encampments fleeting. At some point in time, between 20,000 and 40,000 years ago, sea levels were low enough that a vast land bridge was exposed between Asia and North America. But the land bridge was not the only way across.Â

This book upends our notions of where these people came from and who they were. The unpeopled continent they reached was inhabited by megafauna - mastodons, sloths, mammoths, saber-toothed cats, lions, bison, and bears. The First People were not docile - Paleolithic spear points are still encrusted with the protein of their prey - but they were wildly outnumbered, and many were prey to the much larger animals. This is a chronicle of the last millennia of the Ice Age, the gradual oscillations and retreat of glaciers, the clues and traces that document the first encounters of early humans, and the animals whose presence governed the humans' chances for survival.

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Audible Audiobook

Listening Length: 9 hours and 10 minutes

Program Type: Audiobook

Version: Unabridged

Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.

Audible.com Release Date: May 1, 2018

Language: English, English

ASIN: B079NKRLGT

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

Craig Childs does for archaeology what John McPhee does for geology. His earlier book, "House of Rain" explained the archaeology of the Southwest better than any other source I have found. Now "Atlas of a Lost World" does it for the earliest inhabitants of the western hemisphere. He relates a complex story in an entertaining and readable way. I regret not taking notes but I plan on reading the book again in a few months and will for sure take notes. It would have been helpful if the book had a time line for the numerous archaeological sites. Much of the earliest data are controversial and the author presents the pros and cons. A strong point of the book is the in depth discussion of megafauna. Trying to relive as much as possible what the early arrivals experienced, Childs visited many of the early sites from what is left of the Alaskan land bridge to the sinkholes of Florida. He also kayaked part of the coastal highway. In doing so he gain some insight into human behavior under truly frontier conditions. If I recall correctly he concluded the earliest arrivals were pretty much like ourselves. So what drove humans to do what they had to brave. Its seem genetics (D4 receptors) and perhaps a brain 5% larger that ours.

The professional archaeology community seems more willing than ever to question long-held theories about the peopling of the Americas, so Childs's book on Ice Age life comes at a great time. The book is loosely structured around a series of trips Childs's takes with various companions to important places in the field of prehistoric archaeology. He kayaks the Aucilla River in Florida, for example, where megafauna bones and stone tools have been uncovered. Interwoven among these trip narratives are distillations of past and current theories about Ice Age settlement, and interwoven among these summaries are Childs's musings and speculations about what life would have been like for people in Ice Age North America.While the time is ideal for a book about Ice Age archaeology, this is not the ideal book on the subject. The most engaging parts of the book are the author's approachable summaries and syntheses of research on the places he discusses. In these passages, I appreciate Childs's willingness to present potentially controversial ideas without committing to a particular theory. Parts of the book capture the scientific uncertainty about how the Americas were peopled and might open your mind to new possibilities.The problem is that the good bits noted above are crowded out by the book's less compelling components: trip details that frequently feel superfluous and speculations about ancient people that are conditioned by a vision of prehistoric America that feels antiquated. This latter vision is of adventurous hunters (probably male) penetrating a wide-open and virgin North America. It's a vision that's appealing for readers stuck in our technologized and McDonaldized 21st-century America, but I think the focus on the act of hunting megafauna can obscure other aspects of Ice Age people.The book's fondness for the hunters is manifested in its focus on projectile points (or alleged projectile points) and other edged tools. This is natural since stone survives better than other materials used by prehistoric people, but there are a few freak survivals of other artifacts to at least form kernels for discussion (what about the 10,000-year-old sagebrush bark shoes found in Nevada, for example? What about linguistic evidence, which is only touched on lightly here?). I also think it would have also been fair—given the relative lack of material evidence about Ice Age people—to talk more about early archaic archaeology (very old, but not in the Ice Age proper) to speculate about the preceding period.There's a lot more to know about Ice Age people than how and what they hunted. What did they wear? Could they weave? How did they carry their possessions? Did they have dogs? Childs is limited by a very slim archaeological record, but a revised vision of Ice Age North Americans might aid in excavating more from what little material remains.

This book is little more than a travelogue with the author telling of his visits to a number of sites in North America bearing significant archaeological evidence left by the first humans in the Western Hemisphere. In super-florid language, he relates his attempts to imagine the lives these people lived and on one adventure he imagines himself a mammoth while being hunted by his trip mates. He generally does a good job of describing the archaeology of where he visits but the book is in no way comprehensive and its title’s use of the word Atlas misleads the would-be reader. There are a few sketchy maps in the text that are of little use with the one of the “Braided Yukon River as it crosses the Arctic Circle” hard to make out and little resembles the area as shown on USGS maps. The front and rear endpapers are identical maps showing the locations of significant ice age finds but they don’t show all sites mentioned in the text: Upward Sun in Alaska and Clovis and Folsom in New Mexico. The author credits a number of individuals who helped in the production of this book. Someone should have caught, among other examples, that ground rising above water in a marshland, referred to a number of times when describing kayaking in the Aucilla River region in Florida, is a hummock and not a hammock. The author teaches writing and is not an archeologist. I was very disappointed in this book and advise anyone to look inside before buying.

This was a great, accessible and personal glimpse into reconstructing the lives of ice age travelers. Childs has a wonderful narrative voice, and treats his subject with a passion often lacking in archeological reporting. I look forward to reading his other books.As an aside, I had the privilege of hearing Childs speak at Prescott College in Arizona. I could hear his voice in his pages.

A lyrical trek across the late Pleistocene/early Neocene landscape and the peopling of North America. I think school age children would especially benefit from reading a book like this -- if only they can be pried away from their smart devices and computer games. The author has that rare talent among writers of being able to take the reader to a very distant and alien place and time -- as if you are seeing and experiencing those same sights and sensations with him.

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