Thor Heyerdahl

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Adrift on the Sea of Time

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Much of the credit for establishing early man's rightful foothold in history goes to author-adventurer Thor Heyerdahl, who popularized his theory of the evolution of navigation and civilization in his Kon-Tiki (Pacific) and Ra (Atlantic) expeditions. This slightly repetitive and highly detailed collection of essays [Early Man and the Ocean] bolsters the Norwegian's contention that "invisible marine conveyors"—tides and currents—not only dictated the flow of ancient oceanic traffic, but also determined the diffusion of culture.

More compelling is Heyerdahl's understated, secondary theme, that historical evidence can be manipulated and perverted by scientific bias or ethnocentrism…. For the sake of simplicity, if not greed, it was quietly overlooked that European explorers were drawing on the expertise of Inca informants, Phoenician merchant colonizers, West Coast Haida Indians and other "primitives," who, generations earlier, carved routes through the same waters. (pp. 56-7)

That same narrow-mindedness gripped 19th- and 20th-century scientists who misconstrued botanical, zoological and cultural parallels between civilizations because they could not recognize that aborigines were capable of extended sea travel in brilliantly constructed crafts—well before the European pilgrimages. Cultural cartographer Heyerdahl takes the reader to Vancouver Island, the Galápagos Islands, Greenland and Easter Island in search of his mentors. Ironically, Early Man and the Ocean obliquely illustrates that even as we race into space we have a limited insight into those who came before us. (p. 57)

Toba Korenblum, "Adrift on the Sea of Time," in Maclean's Magazine (© 1979 by Maclean's Magazine; reprinted by permission), Vol. 92, No. 11, March 12, 1979, pp. 56-7.

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Early Man and the Ocean: A Search for the Beginnings of Navigation and Seaborne Civilizations

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