ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

As I sit here, in early 2003, I have before me several pages of manuscript bearing majestically encouraging and tactful notes from Ian Tattersall of the American Museum of Natural History pointing out, inter alia, that Périgueux is not a wine-producing region, that it is inventive but a touch unorthodox of me to italicize taxonomic divisions above the level of genus and species, that I have persistently misspelled Olorgesailie (a place I visited only recently), and so on in similar vein through two chapters of text covering his area of expertise, early humans.

Goodness knows how many other inky embarrassments may lurk in these pages yet, but it is thanks to Dr. Tattersall and all of those whom I am about to mention that there aren’t many hundreds more. I cannot begin to thank adequately those who helped me in the preparation of this book. I am especially indebted to the following, who were uniformly generous and kindly and showed the most heroic reserves of patience in answering one simple, endlessly repeated question: “I’m sorry, but can you explain that again?”

In England: David Caplin of Imperial College London; Richard Fortey, Len Ellis and Kathy Way of the Natural History Museum; Martin Raff of University College London; Rosalind Harding of the Institute of Biological Anthropology in Oxford; Dr Laurence Smaje, formerly of the Wellcome Institute; and Keith Blackmore of The Times.

In the United States: Ian Tattersall of the American Museum of Natural History in New York; John Thorstensen, Mary K. Hudson and David Blanchflower of Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire; Dr. William Abdu and Dr. Bryan Marsh of Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, New Hampshire; Ray Anderson and Brian Witzke of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources, Iowa City; Mike Voorhies of the University of Nebraska and Ashfall Fossil Beds State Park near Orchard, Nebraska; Chuck Offenburger of Buena Vista University, Storm Lake, Iowa; Ken Rancourt, director of research, Mount Washington Observatory, Gorham, New Hampshire; Paul Doss, geologist of Yellowstone National Park, and his wife, Heidi, also of the National Park; Frank Asaro of the University of California at Berkeley; Oliver Payne and Lynn Addison of the National Geographic Society; James O. Farlow, Indiana-Purdue University; Roger L. Larson, professor of marine geophysics, University of Rhode Island; Jeff Guinn of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram newspaper; Jerry Kasten of Dallas, Texas; and the staff of the Iowa Historical Society in Des Moines.

In Australia: the Reverend Robert Evans of Hazelbrook, New South Wales; Dr. Jill Cainey, Australian Bureau of Meteorology; Alan Thorne and Victoria Bennett of the Australian National University in Canberra; Louise Burke and John Hawley of Canberra; Anne Milne of the Sydney Morning Herald; Ian Nowak, formerly of the Geological Society of Western Australia; Thomas H. Rich of Museum Victoria; Tim Flannery, director of the South Australian Museum in Adelaide; Natalie Papworth and Alan MacFadyen of the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens, Hobart; and the very helpful staff of the State Library of New South Wales in Sydney.

And elsewhere: Sue Superville, information centre manager at the Museum of New Zealand in Wellington; and Dr. Emma Mbua, Dr. Koen Maes and Jillani Ngalla of the Kenya National Museum in Nairobi.

I am also deeply and variously indebted to Patrick Janson-Smith, Gerald Howard, Marianne Velmans, Alison Tulett, Gillian Somerscales, Larry Finlay, Steve Rubin, Jed Mattes, Carol Heaton, Charles Elliott, David Bryson, Felicity Bryson, Dan McLean, Nick Southern, Gerald Engelbretsen, Patrick Gallagher, Larry Ashmead, and the staff of the peerless and ever-cheery Howe Library in Hanover, New Hampshire.

Above all, and as always, my profoundest thanks to my dear, patient, incomparable wife, Cynthia.

2003

For their work in helping to produce this illustrated edition, my thanks go to Katrina Whone, Sheila Lee, Jo Micklem, Phil Lord, Alex Smith, Emma Smith, Alison Martin, Cordelia Molloy and Ruth McKernan.

Finally, I wish to thank and remember Miriam Hyman, who died in the terrorist attack on London on 7 July 2005, shortly after completing her work as a picture researcher on this edition.

2005

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