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| View Larger Image | Dragon Bone Hill: An Ice-Age Saga of Homo erectus by Noel Thomas Boaz, Russell L. Ciochon
| | List Price: | $35.00 | | Price: | $28.00 | | You Save: | $7.00 (20%) |  | | Available: | Usually ships in 24 hours |  | |  | | Sales Rank: | 766751 | | Studio: | Oxford University Press, USA |  | | Binding: | Hardcover | | Number Of Pages: | 264 | | Publication Date: | February 16, 2004 | | Publisher: | Oxford University Press, USA |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description "Peking Man," a cave man once thought a great hunter who had first tamed fire, actually was a composite of the gnawed remains of some fifty women, children, and men unfortunate enough to have been the prey of the giant cave hyena. Researching the famous fossil site of Dragon Bone Hill in China, scientists Noel T. Boaz and Russell L. Ciochon retell the story of the cave's unique species of early human, Homo erectus. Boaz and Ciochon take readers on a gripping scientific odyssey. New evidence shows that Homo erectus was an opportunist who rode a tide of environmental change out Africa and into Eurasia, puddle-jumping from one gene pool to the next. Armed with a shaky hold on fire and some sharp rocks, Homo erectus incredibly survived for over 1.5 million years, much longer than our own species Homo sapiens has been on Earth. Tell-tale marks on fossil bones show that the lives of these early humans were brutal, ruled by hunger and who could strike the hardest blow, yet there are fleeting glimpses of human compassion as well. The small brain of Homo erectus and its strangely unchanging culture indicate that the species could not talk. Part of that primitive culture included ritualized aggression, to which the extremely thick skulls of Homo erectus bear mute witness. Both a vivid recreation of the unimagined way of life of a prehistoric species, so similar yet so unlike us, and a fascinating exposition of how modern multidisciplinary research can test hypotheses in human evolution, Dragon Bone Hill is science writing at its best. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 5.0 based on 1 review)
| Reads like a mystery novel  This overview of old history regarding the worlds' most extensive fossil hominid site is great. The sequence of discovery, the loss of the fossils in WWII confusion, and the telling of the modern rethinking of the site and its significance is really very well done. February 21, 2004 | |
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