Bültmann & Gerriets
Bones
von Elaine Dewar
Verlag: Random House of Canada
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ISBN: 978-0-307-37555-1
Erschienen am 04.03.2011
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 640 Seiten

Preis: 25,49 €

25,49 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Elaine Dewar is a prominent journalist and author with many National Magazine Awards to her credit. Her previous books include Cloak of Green, an exposé of environmental politics. She lives in Toronto.



Contents
Introduction
Part One
1 Asian Origins? • Clovis First Across the Bering Strait
2 Bones 101 • A Sordid History Begets a Compromised Science
3 Found and Lost • The Misplaced Remains of the Accepted Path
4 The Battle for Monte Verde • Rewriting the First American Story?by Committee
5 The Founding Mothers • The Spectral Trail of Mitochondrial DNA
6 Virtual Bones • Are Reburied Remains Hard Evidence?
7 The Kennewick Chronicles • Science, History, Politics, Religion . . . and the United States Army
8 Excavating the Museum Shelves • Weaving a New Image of Ancient Americans
9 We were Always Here • Some Native American Histories
10 Pendejo Cave • Indiana Jones Digs Down to the Foundation
Part Two
11 Beneath the Southern Cross • The Road Leads Back in Time
12 Lunch with Luzia • The Fine African Features of the Oldest Woman in the Americas
13 Proof Parasite • A Wormhole in the Bering Strait Theory
14 Revisionist Prehistory • Bones Beyond the Bounds of Accepted Theory
15 Brazilian Edens • The Sheltered Finds of Minas Gerais
16 Science Contender • Dispatches from the Most Ancient Trenches
17 Pedra Furada • Ancient Arts of the Little People Part Three
18 Science under Fire • The Inquisition of Karl Reinhard
19 The Kennewick Shuffle • Dancing Around the Hard Questions
20 The Reverse Migration • North, by Boat
21 The Corridor That Wasn't • The Cold Facts Behind the Absence of Evidence
22 Hard Science, Hardball Politics • Kennewick Reevaluated
23 Going Home • Burying the Bones, Treasuring the Past
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index



Scientists not so long ago unanimously believed that people first walked to the New World from northeast Asia across the Bering land bridge at the end of the Ice Age 11,000 years ago. But in the last ten years, new tools applied to old bones have yielded evidence that tells an entirely different story.
In Bones, Elaine Dewar records the ferocious struggle in the scientific world to reshape our views of prehistory. She traveled from the Mackenzie River valley in northern Canada to the arid plains of the Brazilian state of Piaui, from the skull-and-bones-lines offices of the Smithsonian Institution to the basement lab of an archaeologist in Washington State who wondered if the FBI was going to come for him. She met scientists at war with each other and sought to see for herself the oldest human remains on these continents. Along the way, she found that the old answer to the question of who were the First Americans was steeped in the bitter tea of racism.
Bones explores the ambiguous terrain left behind when a scientific paradigm is swept away. It tells the stories of the archaeologists, Native American activists, DNA experts and physical anthropologists scrambling for control of ancient bones of Kennewick Man, Spirit Cave, and the oldest one of all, a woman named Luzia. At stake are professional reputations, lucrative grants, fame, vindication, even the reburial of wandering spirits. The weapons? Lawsuits, threats, violence. The battlefield stretches from Chile to Alaska.
Dewar tells the stories that never find their way into scientific papers — stories of mysterious deaths, of the bones of evil shamen and the shadows falling on the lives of scientists who pulled them from the ground. And she asks the new questions arising out of the science of bones and the stories of first peoples: "What if Native Americans are right in their belief that they have always been in the Americas and did not migrate to the New World at the end of the Ice Age? What if the New World's human story is as long and complicated as that of the Old? What if the New World and the Old World have always been one?"