|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
General Synopsis of the five-part Adventure Series reveals that the
flow of hominid evolution has always been episodic rather than
gradual. Due to some unpredictable perturbations in the global
climate, during the late Pliocene, the African landmass witnessed a
dramatic shrinkage of habitable woodlands, which induced the early
humans living there to adapt or face extinction. The record shows
that they not only succeeded but also flourished, by displaying
true innovation, superior cognitive skills and an imaginative
manipulation of their habitat. physical adaptations that are
unfortunately no longer found in any primate species living today.
They were neither as talented in the trees as the great apes nor as
facile on terra firma as us humans. fossil evidence, there are many
ways to be a hominid and that our way is just one of them. As
pointed out earlier, the hominid evolutionary history has not been
one of gradual continuous improvement but quite sporadic at best
throughout the past four million years. represent just one of the
many twigs on the prickly bush of hominid evolution. We are
definitely not the sole occupants of a pedestal, which all other
primates have aspired to but failed to reach.
In this action-packed series, spanning five episodes, Zak and his
cronies along with world-class scholars of the Life Sciences strive
to identify, describe and understand the intricacies of human
evolution by scrutinizing every fragment of fossilized evidence.
Each science-based narrative reads like an adventure as the team
travels to exotic locales around the globe, seeking to dispel the
lingering pre-Darwinian belief in some uninformed circles that the
complex interrelationships of various organisms reveal the
'intelligent design' of divine creation. Their basic premise is
that due to the onset of the Ice Ages about three million years
ago, the African landmass witnessed a dramatic shrinkage of
habitable woodlands. This induced the early humans living there to
adapt quickly or face extinction. As a result, they began to
acquire physical characteristics, which made them neither as
talented up in the trees as the great apes nor as facile on terra
firma as us, modern humans. Over the next two million years,
several other bipedal hominid forms arose, not all of whom
survived. Each underwent countless rounds of physical adaptation
and change as their bodies continued to be honed by the relentless
process of natural selection. Consequently, our remotest ancestors
essentially became neither apes nor human but a curious 'blend' of
both. Thus we, as Homo sapiens, despite our remarkable cognitive
abilities, merely represent just one of the many twigs on the
prickly bush of hominid evolution. Contrary to popular opinion,
humans are not the sole occupants of that lofty pedestal of
biological perfection that all other primates have aspired to, but
failed to reach.
In this riveting third episode of the five-part Hominid series, Dr.
Brelvi delves into the pre-verbal world of our early ancestors
living 2.2 million years ago. Zak and friends, along with Dr. Abu
Baqr, an intrepid Arab paleontologist from Khartoum, explore the
wild Sudd swamps of southeastern Sudan. Over the span of ten
action-packed days, the team explores the exotic tribal culture of
the Masakin Tiwal dwelling today in the Nuba Mountains; clamber up
the acrid slopes of Kinyeti, a dormant volcano inhabited by vicious
baboons; uncover a trail of human-like footprints left behind by an
ancestral human family; witness a violent encounter between two
rival clans of Zimba Headhunters and navigate the turbid waters of
a croc-infested swamp encircling a freshwater lake choked full of
papyrus reeds. Throughout the narrative, Dr. Brelvi flits back and
forth between the daily hazards of hominid existence in the dim
reaches of pre-history and the potentially fatal dangers lurking in
the murky swamps of Lotagipi for Zak and his team as they blaze an
intriguing trail through human anthropology.
In this action-packed series, spanning five episodes, Zak and his
cronies along with world-class scholars of the Life Sciences strive
to identify, describe and understand the intricacies of human
evolution by scrutinizing every fragment of fossilized evidence.
Each science-based narrative reads like an adventure as the team
travels to exotic locales around the globe, seeking to dispel the
lingering pre-Darwinian belief in some uninformed circles that the
complex interrelationships of various organisms reveal the
'intelligent design' of divine creation. Their basic premise is
that due to the onset of the Ice Ages about three million years
ago, the African landmass witnessed a dramatic shrinkage of
habitable woodlands. This induced the early humans living there to
adapt quickly or face extinction. As a result, they began to
acquire physical characteristics, which made them neither as
talented up in the trees as the great apes nor as facile on terra
firma as us, modern humans. Over the next two million years,
several other bipedal hominid forms arose, not all of whom
survived. Each underwent countless rounds of physical adaptation
and change as their bodies continued to be honed by the relentless
process of natural selection. Consequently, our remotest ancestors
essentially became neither apes nor human but a curious 'blend' of
both. Thus we, as Homo sapiens, despite our remarkable cognitive
abilities, merely represent just one of the many twigs on the
prickly bush of hominid evolution. Contrary to popular opinion,
humans are not the sole occupants of that lofty pedestal of
biological perfection that all other primates have aspired to, but
failed to reach.
General Synopsis of the five-part Adventure Series reveals that the
flow of hominid evolution has always been episodic rather than
gradual. Due to some unpredictable perturbations in the global
climate, during the late Pliocene, the African landmass witnessed a
dramatic shrinkage of habitable woodlands, which induced the early
humans living there to adapt or face extinction. The record shows
that they not only succeeded but also flourished, by displaying
true innovation, superior cognitive skills and an imaginative
manipulation of their habitat. physical adaptations that are
unfortunately no longer found in any primate species living today.
They were neither as talented in the trees as the great apes nor as
facile on terra firma as us humans. fossil evidence, there are many
ways to be a hominid and that our way is just one of them. As
pointed out earlier, the hominid evolutionary history has not been
one of gradual continuous improvement but quite sporadic at best
throughout the past four million years. represent just one of the
many twigs on the prickly bush of hominid evolution. We are
definitely not the sole occupants of a pedestal, which all other
primates have aspired to but failed to reach.
|
You may like...
Sweet rest
Lorenzo Sbrinci
Hardcover
R519
Discovery Miles 5 190
|