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Author Roberts, Patrick, 1991- author.

Title Jungle : how tropical forests shaped the world-and us / Patrick Roberts.

Publication Info. New York, NY : Basic Books, 2021.
©2021

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 New Britain, Main Library - Non Fiction  578.734 ROB    Check Shelf
Edition First US edition.
Description x, 354 pages, 2 unnumbered pages : illustrations, maps, portrait ; 25 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references in notes (pages 305-341) and index.
Contents Into the light : the beginning of the world as we know it -- A tropical world -- "Gondwanan" forests and the dinosaurs -- "Tree houses" for the first mammals -- The leafy cradles of our ancestors -- On the tropical origins of our species -- Farmed forests -- Island paradises lost? -- Cities in the "Jungle" -- Europe and the tropics in the "Age of exploration" -- Globalization of the tropics -- A tropical "anthropocene"? -- Houses on fire -- A global responsibility -- Appendix: Tropical forests in geological time.
Summary "This book tells a deep history of the world, arguing that tropical rainforests played an outsize and overlooked role in our lives. Although we now recognize the crucial role tropical forests play in regulating planetary systems like the atmosphere, we still tend to think of them as a kind of "green hell," as inhospitable, prehistoric wildernesses, largely irrelevant to our lives. This has made it easier for private interests to exploit rainforest resources, but it also influences environment policy. We treat rainforests as either raw commodities, or as landscapes that are unfit for human life and should be left alone. But in recent years, new developments in archaeology and anthropology have cast doubt on this narrative. The author is one of the leaders of this growing area of research, and in this book, he reveals mounting evidence that the rainforests have always been intimately connected to life on Earth. They made the planet habitable for the first land animals, oversaw the rise and fall of the dinosaurs, disseminated the first flowering plants around the globe, and played host to the emergence and development of human societies. This last point is especially provocative, as the author challenges the dominant narrative that homo sapiens evolved in the East African savannahs. These findings shed new light on the first humans, as well as the cultural biases we bring to studying them. The author argues that, in part, we have missed signs of human life in the rainforests because it was markedly different from our own. Western archaeologists and anthropologists historically look for signs of cultures that dominated and permanently altered landscapes. (Which is to say, cultures that look Western.) But life in the rainforests reveals a more flexible, less domineering relationship with the land. Because we were looking for the wrong things, we simply missed some of the earliest signs of farming practices in Papua New Guinea, and Mayan cities that were arguably some of the largest urban structures in the pre-industrial world. This book reevaluates the assumptions that we bring to the study human evolution, what counts as "wilderness," and how human societies can be organized"--Provided by publisher.
Subject Rain forests -- History.
SCIENCE / Natural History.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Physical.
NATURE / Ecosystems & Habitats / Forests & Rainforests.
Rain forests. (OCoLC)fst01089466
Genre/Form Informational works. (OCoLC)fst01919930
History. (OCoLC)fst01411628
Informational works.
Added Title How tropical forests shaped the world-and us
ISBN 9781541600096 hardcover
1541600096 hardcover
9781541600102 electronic book
Standard No. 40030755946
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