
Origins
How the Earth Shaped Human History
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Narrated by:
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John Sackville
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By:
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Lewis Dartnell
About this listen
Random House presents the audiobook edition of Origins by Lewis Dartnell, read by John Sackville.
When we talk about human history, we focus on great leaders, mass migration and decisive wars. But how has the Earth itself determined our destiny? How has our planet made us?
As a species we are shaped by our environment. Geological forces drove our evolution in East Africa; mountainous terrain led to the development of democracy in Greece; and today voting behaviour in the United States follows the bed of an ancient sea. The human story is the story of these forces, from plate tectonics and climate change, to atmospheric circulation and ocean currents.
How are the Himalayas linked to the orbit of the Earth, and to the formation of the British Isles? By taking us billions of years into our planet’s past, Professor Lewis Dartnell tells us the ultimate origin story. When we reach the point where history becomes science we see a vast web of connections that underwrites our modern world and helps us face the challenges of the future.
From the cultivation of the first crops to the founding of modern states, Origins reveals the Earth’s awesome impact on the shape of human civilizations.
©2019 Lewis Dartnell (P)2019 Penguin AudioCritic reviews
Unbelievably Good Listen
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This covers everything, puts things in perspective
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Great book, narrator Whispers irritatingly
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it is well and carefully read by John Sackville although, as he is deftly spoken, it's not advisable to listen well into the evening ... although, drifting off into a doze is an excellent excuse for starting a chapter again!
As if excuse were needed...
Fascinating
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Excellent
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As for the animals that have made us informed us, the author discusses horses and domesticated animals as well as camels. The story of the camel is remarkable Camels do not store water in their humps, which is in fact a store of body fat. Rather than distributing fat all over their bodies in an insulating layer, as many mammals do, camels use their humps as fat reservoirs, which provide energy while allowing the animal to remain cool. The camel is uniquely adapted to desert survival. After a week or so of trekking through an arid landscape, it can have lost almost a third of its body water with no ill effect – the animal can cope with such extreme dehydration without its blood becoming dangerously thick. The camel’s kidneys and intestines are able to produce highly concentrated urine and dung so dry it can be used to fuel a fire; it can also recapture moisture it would otherwise have breathed out, the water recondensing in its nasal passage like the drips from an air-conditioner unit. And the padded feet of the animal allow it to traverse such diverse terrain as desert sands, swamps or rock-strewn landscapes.
How the world made us looks at the elements in the periodic table and how we moved from the Stone Age to the Bronze Age to then mixing and melting properties to become copper. And yet now we have 60 pieces of element on us just in our mobile phone.
The story of how the Portuguese came to understand how the oceans moved regarding ocean currents and how winds blew in different directions were how they learnt to navigate and move across the world. I loved learning how sailors and navigators learnt how the winds blow in consistent directions and patterns and how ocean flows could make ships travel to further places easier by following its directional flow. The great empires became great empires because they learnt how to navigate following simple rules of nature that must be difficult to have learnt. But they did have time and no Internet to distract them. However, observation and diligent are wonderful things. ”In each hemisphere the atmosphere enveloping the planet is divided into three great circulation cells, like giant tubes wrapped around the world, each rolling in place and shifting north and south slightly with the seasons. These produce the major wind zones of the planet – easterly trade winds, westerlies and polar easterlies – which in turn drive the circulating ocean currents. Pretty much the entire wind pattern on Earth can therefore be explained by three simple facts: the equator is hotter than the poles, warm air rises, and the world spins.” Alongside this they collected information about the languages and the geographical features that further help them understand how to navigate so navigate around the world. Moving from Polaris in the northern skies to the Southern Cross in the southern hemisphere also helped support their ability to conquer the west. Before this is the story of how China and the Mongolian army from the steps and how Genghis Khan would overthrow even the downfall of the Roman Army is also another fascinating tale told in this book. This book can teach us how we got here and how the origins and features of the earth made us who we are. Fascinating stuff.
And illuminating look at how the Earth made us
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most enjoyed book for a long time
well read as well
fantastic
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Awesome book
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Perfectly read.
Original
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Best intro to Geology ever!
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