After the Ice: A Global Human History 20,000-5000 BC
 

After the Ice: A Global Human History 20,000-5000 BC

by Steven Mithen

20,000 B.C., the peak of the last ice age--the atmosphere is heavy with dust, deserts, and glaciers span vast regions, and people, if they survive at all, exist in small, mobile groups, facing the threat of extinction.

But these people live on the brink of seismic change--10,000 years of climate shifts culminating in abrupt global warming that will usher in a fundamentally... (read more)

Top tags: prehistoryscienceice ageanthropologyarchaeology prehistory (all tags)

Overview: Amazon Reviews

After The Ice how did we survive
  • Rated 4 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2008-09-19
"After the Ice" is well read and easy to understand. The character he invented gives the story a new insight. The book is quite comprehensive. I would recommend this book for those interested in old age history.
Human prehistory is awe-inspiring
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2008-04-29
This book was a grand sweep across the era from the LGM to 5000 B.C. of human prehistory. Mithen is careful to use only facts available to describe the lives of people around the world at this time. His notes document in clear detail the evidence for his assumptions. There is more evidence out there than I realized and appreciate this book for bringing it all together in a comprehensive package. The style of writing is easy to read, almost poetic at times. My God, that we're even here today discussing the human prehistory is amazing. Our ancestors were impressive in their pursuit of survival. It makes me want to try to start a fire with sticks and a piece of flint to see if I could even do that. The reviewers who were turned off by the climate change theme need to finish the book. What Mithen does so effectively, whether it was inadvertant or not, was to elucidate the fact that climate change has always been with us and will always be with us. Whether we can cause a change by our behavior is, I think, still debatable. But the climate will change, like it or not, come hell or high water. And both have come and gone many times over. What this book brings home is the lesson that humans can adapt, must adapt and will adapt to survive.
Global Warming Hysteric
  • Rated 3 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2008-01-23
Groan.....If I had only read all the reviews on this book I would have hesitated in buying it!

I just started reading it and immediately became disappointed due to the premiss of the author regarding anthromorphic (sp?) causes of global warming. Ugh....he could not even support that fact as he shows a chart of temprature fluctuations showing an ever so slight decrease in temprature from 6000BC to 2000AD. This indicated to me that the author lacked scientific perspective but followed the "flavor-of-the-day" views of media hype.

Sad to se I reached this conclusion by reading only a few pages and scanning others. I will force myself to finish the book and may change my opinion of the work but, I some how doubt that.
Early agriculture and related matters
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2007-08-27
As human beings, our bodies tell of our past as forest and savanna-dwelling primates. However, when living in a modern, industrial society, some of us spend an astonishingly small part of our lives in natural settings, and most of us do so only on weekends for leisure. How did this state come about? One of the most important steps in this direction was the neolithic revolution, the change of human lifestyle away from hunter-gathering towards farming, domesticating plants and animals and living in permanent settlements. How this change came about is the topic of Steven Mithen's book.

In science, there are proven facts and educated speculation. No one can say for sure how the inhabitants of post ice-age Europe acted when they sat around their campfires and how they spent their days. There is, however, archaeological evidence which can allow us educated guesses. Mithen uses a hypothetical time-traveler in order to narrate his educated guesses. He names this time-traveler "John Lubbock", after the Victorian scientists and progressive member of parliament who authored an early book on prehistory. This makes Mithen's book quite entertaining and readable, while it is academically sound at the same time. I can't judge how complete and up-to date his review of meso- and neolithic archeology is, but he makes sure to give room to the arguments of both sides in the case of controversies before he presents his own conclusion on the matter. The book covers the preceding mesolithic times and the neolithic revolution in the middle East, Europe, Asia, greater Australia and Africa. The development, or lack thereof, of agricultural civilizations followed a unique course in all of these places. Sedentaryness, plant and animal domestication and farming did not always occur coincidentally and were by no means irreversible processes. Climate changes were always very important in determining which human lifestyles were possible. With this in mind, Mithen warns of the likely consequences of our current, man-made increase in global temperature.

We are usually first presented with hard evidence from archaeological digs, such as the bones, tools and food scraps found. Then, he lets Lubbock hike around the area at the time of the lives of the people who left these remains. Often Lubbock joins the neolithic men for a meal or an evening around a campfire and observes their health, eating habits and cults. Mithen believes, rightfully so, that archeology should be more than a cataloging of the items found at a site, but a multi-disciplinary attempt at reconstructing early man's life. He describes a lot of fascinating multi-disciplinary science, with archaeologists cooperating with biologists and geologists, in order to gain answers about the biotic and abiotic environment of meso- and neolithic times. He also takes the time to describe what the area where the prehistoric settlements were found looks like, what it feels like to hike around there and how the view enthralled him and likely impressed prehistoric man as well.

Two issues I found particularly interesting: One is the human role in the extinction of large land-mammals such as mammoths - Mithen thinks that although we did not barbecue every single one of them, human hunting together with worsening environmental conditions lead to their demise. The other is the human settlement of the Americas - Mithen first introduces the reader to the Clovis culture and after carefully surveying the evidence concludes that the Clovis people were in fact not the first Americans.

An intellectually enjoyable description of a fascinating and important area at the doorstep of historic times!
Very Good ; 4.5 stars
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, 2007-07-08
The subtitle of this book is slightly misleading. What Mithen describes is not so much a single history as a series of regional histories. Mithen begins with a reconstruction, to the extent permitted by the archaeological evidence, of human hunter-gatherer life at the peak of the last Ice Age. He then reconstructs the trajectory of human history until the threshold of civilization about 5000 BC. Based on careful analysis of the archaeological data, Mithen describes the probable history of human life in all major regions of the world including Western Asia, Europe, Australia, East Asia, South Asia, and Africa. This is very much also a thoughtful description of major archaeological finds and analyses.
Recurrent themes throughout all of Mithen's historical reconstructions are the role of climactic change as a driving force in human history and human ingenuity in exploiting available natural resources. sometimes with serious long-term consequences. Included in the different sections are very interesting discussions of the origins of agriculture and sedentary life, of the possible role of humans in the destruction of Pleistocene megafauna, and of the changes that set the stage for the emergence of civilization.
Mithen is a clear writer and his coverage of the archaeological literature is excellent. After the Ice has an excellent bibliography. The only problem with this book is that Mithen's dedication to producing careful regional histories tends to obscure what could be a more integrated story of global climate change and human response.
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