In the Wake of the Jomon
McGraw-Hill Contemporary (Verlag)
978-0-07-144902-1 (ISBN)
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'I couldn't go back in time, but I could tether myself to these brothers and sisters of the sea. The Jomon mariners built no cathedrals with lofty buttresses and sweeping arches. They left their journey as a legacy - wispy, ephemeral, blurred in the fog of time. I wanted to share the vibrations of that journey, to better understand my ancestors - and yes, myself' - Jon. In 1996, anthropologists were stunned by an extraordinary discovery near Kennewick, Washington. Skeletal remains found along the muddy banks of the Columbia River - and radiocarbon dated to between 9,300 and 9,600 years ago - were highly similar to those of the ancient Jomon people of northern Japan. Not only did this finding challenge conventional wisdom about the first Americans, it also raised a seemingly unanswerable question: Could prehistoric mariners have reached North America by crossing thousands of miles of the tempestuous North Pacific in small open boats? A few years later, Jon Turk set out to prove they could have.
In this remarkable narrative, adventurer and science writer Turk relates his two-year, 3,000-mile small-boat expedition to trace the probable route of the Jomon from northern Japan to the coast of Alaska by way of Siberia. Along the way, he introduces strong archaeological and anthropological evidence that he was not the first to follow this route. Paddling their tiny craft along the rugged Siberian coastline, Turk's small party visits remote villages whose inhabitants wrest subsistence livings from stingy soil and frigid, treacherous waters. Turk's descriptions of these hardy individualists - as tough and self-reliant as the Jomon voyagers must have been - offer a rare glimpse of the struggle to survive in one of our planet's most unforgiving environments. Featuring sharply drawn encounters with the denizens of Siberia - both human and animal - and frightening near-disasters at sea, and graced by Turk's deep insights into humankind's relentless drive to explore new frontiers, "In the Wake of the Jomon" is the boldest and most thought-provoking sea adventure since Kon-Tiki.
Jon Turk is the author of Cold Oceans: Adventures in Kayak, Rowboat and Dogsled (HarperCollins, 1998). A chemist by training and an adventurer by avocation, he has for decades paddled the worlds coldest oceansincluding Cape Horn and a journey across the Northwest Passage from Alaska to Baffin Islandand has traveled all over the world on numerous expeditions to strange and exotic places. His expeditions have been sponsored by The North Face, Prijon Kayaks, and other outdoor gear manufacturers. He is the author of 23 environmental and earth science textbooks for W.B. Saunders Company. HOMETOWN: Darby, Montana
Author’s NotePrologueKennewick ManPassage to PetropavlovskInterludeTo Cape RubiconA Candle for EvdociaNotesAnnotated BibliographyAcknowledgments
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 16.5.2005 |
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Zusatzinfo | 3 Illustrations |
Verlagsort | London |
Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Reisen ► Reiseberichte ► Welt / Arktis / Antarktis |
Naturwissenschaften ► Geowissenschaften ► Geografie / Kartografie | |
ISBN-10 | 0-07-144902-7 / 0071449027 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-07-144902-1 / 9780071449021 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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