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1491: New Revelations Of The Americas Before Columbus Author: Charles C. Mann
(Audio Cassette, 2005)
 In 1491: NEW REVELATIONS OF THE AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS, Charles C. Mann presents an accessible hist...
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LIST PRICE $34.95 Save 56%
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MuzeFormatDesc: Audio Cassette ISBN-10: 1565119770 ISBN-13: 9781565119772 Aug 2005 Publisher: Highbridge Co Language: English |
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Details

Synopsis In 1491: NEW REVELATIONS OF THE AMERICA BEFORE COLUMBUS, Charles C. Mann presents an accessible history that effectively wipes away generations of high-school teaching that trivialized, dismissed, or was just flat-out wrong about the peoples that inhabited what we have come to call the Americas prior to the contact with Columbus. Mann presents a huge amount of fascinating information, including how the Indians made their way to the new continents by crossing the Bering land bridge or riding warm sea currents from Japan. He describes the land as it was in their time, and how the Indians changed it, making plains where forests had been, and the rise of extensive and complex cities that rivaled those of Europe. He focuses primarily on the Incas and the Mexica (popularly called the Aztecs), as well as the Indians of New England, who encountered the Pilgrims. Drawing on a "tsunami" of research in the field of Native American studies. Mann, a science writer, offers an expanded view of the New World, synthesizing research in anthropology, population and demographics, agriculture and technology, and geography and archeology. He also touches on what happened to these people after the arrival of Europeans, considering in particular the impact of European-based diseases that decimated the populations. A New York Times Notable Book of the Year for 2005.
| Size | | Height: | 6.0 in | | Width: | 4.3 in | | Thickness: | 2.8 in | | Weight: | 10.4 oz |
Industry Reviews "As intriguing as these arguments are, it's Mann's engaging writing that will help bring them wider attention. He's got a knack for accurately--and interestingly--paraphrasing the dry-as-(ahem)-dust language of the scholarly archaeological report, and knows just when to throw in a personal anecdote or a fascinating digression. With which 14491 is positively crammed." Ruminator Review - Matt Konrad
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