The last lost world : ice ages, human origins, and the invention of the Pleistocene
(Book)

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Published
New York : Viking, 2012.
Physical Desc
x, 306 pages : ill., maps ; 24 cm.
Status
Los Osos Library - Adult Nonfiction
551.792
1 available

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Los Osos Library - Adult Nonfiction551.792On Shelf

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Published
New York : Viking, 2012.
Format
Book
Language
English

Notes

Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. [273]-288) and index.
Description
"An investigation of the Pleistocene's dual character, as a geologic time, and as a cultural idea. The Pleistocene is the epoch of geologic time closest to our own, a time of ice ages, global migrations, and mass extinctions, of woolly rhinos, mammoths, giant ground sloths, and not least, early species of Homo. It's the world that created ours. But outside that environmental story there exists a parallel narrative that describes how our ideas about the Pleistocene have emerged. This story explains the place of the Pleistocene in shaping intellectual culture, and the role of a rapidly evolving culture in creating the idea of the Pleistocene and in establishing its dimensions. This second story addresses how the epoch, its Earth-shaping events, and its creatures, both those that survived and those that disappeared, helped kindle new sciences and a new origins story as the sciences split from the humanities as a way of looking at the past."--From publisher description.

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