Jennifer Macaire
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November 2012
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The Road to Alexander (The Time for Alexander #1)
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published
2006
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14 editions
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Legends of Persia (The Time for Alexander #2)
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published
2006
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12 editions
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Son of the Moon (The Time for Alexander #3)
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published
2003
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10 editions
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Storms Over Babylon (The Time for Alexander #4)
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published
2012
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8 editions
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A Remedy In Time (The Tempus U Time Travel series)
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published
2021
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5 editions
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A Crown in Time (The Tempus U Time Travel series)
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published
2020
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3 editions
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The Soul of Time (The Time for Alexander #6)
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published
2012
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5 editions
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Chants to Persephone (The Time for Alexander #5)
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published
2012
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8 editions
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The Eternal Banquet (The Time for Alexander #7)
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published
2012
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6 editions
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The Secret of Shabaz
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published
2004
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5 editions
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Blindsided By His Betrayal: Surviving the Shock of Your Husband's Infidelity
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Topics Mentioning This Author
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SOS: Serious Over...: BINGO R19 | Captain's Log | 368 | 68 | Dec 11, 2019 09:28PM | |
| SOS: Serious Over...: R19: Team #4 ~ Quad Squad | 222 | 92 | Dec 14, 2019 10:19PM | |
| Nothing But Readi...: Team Superbia | 1013 | 307 | Dec 16, 2019 08:15AM | |
| 2026 Reading Chal...: histeriker's 65 goal | 13 | 59 | May 08, 2020 04:06PM | |
| Aussie Readers: Annual A-Z Characters 2020 | 288 | 249 | Jan 06, 2021 09:21PM |
“Since the dawn of time, several billion human (or humanlike) beings have lived, each contributing a little genetic variability to the total human stock. Out of this vast number, the whole of our understanding of human prehistory is based on the remains, often exceedingly fragmentary, of perhaps five thousand individuals. You could fit it all into the back of a pickup truck if you didn't mind how much you jumbled everything up, Ian Tattersall, the bearded and friendly curator of anthropology at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, replied when I asked him the size of the total world archive of hominid and early human bones.
The shortage wouldn't be so bad if the bones were distributed evenly through time and space, but of course they are not. They appear randomly, often in the most tantalizing fashion. Homo erectus walked the Earth for well over a million years and inhabited territory from the Atlantic edge of Europe to the Pacific side of China, yet if you brought back to life every Homo erectus individual whose existence we can vouch for, they wouldn't fill a school bus. Homo habilis consists of even less: just two partial skeletons and a number of isolated limb bones. Something as short-lived as our own civilization would almost certainly not be known from the fossil record at all.
In Europe, Tattersall offers by way of illustration, you've got hominid skulls in Georgia dated to about 1.7 million years ago, but then you have a gap of almost a million years before the next remains turn up in Spain, right on the other side of the continent, and then you've got another 300,000-year gap before you get a Homo heidelbergensis in Germany and none of them looks terribly much like any of the others. He smiled. It's from these kinds of fragmentary pieces that you're trying to work out the histories of entire species. It's quite a tall order. We really have very little idea of the relationships between many ancient species which led to us and which were evolutionary dead ends. Some probably don't deserve to be regarded as separate species at all.”
― A Short History of Nearly Everything
The shortage wouldn't be so bad if the bones were distributed evenly through time and space, but of course they are not. They appear randomly, often in the most tantalizing fashion. Homo erectus walked the Earth for well over a million years and inhabited territory from the Atlantic edge of Europe to the Pacific side of China, yet if you brought back to life every Homo erectus individual whose existence we can vouch for, they wouldn't fill a school bus. Homo habilis consists of even less: just two partial skeletons and a number of isolated limb bones. Something as short-lived as our own civilization would almost certainly not be known from the fossil record at all.
In Europe, Tattersall offers by way of illustration, you've got hominid skulls in Georgia dated to about 1.7 million years ago, but then you have a gap of almost a million years before the next remains turn up in Spain, right on the other side of the continent, and then you've got another 300,000-year gap before you get a Homo heidelbergensis in Germany and none of them looks terribly much like any of the others. He smiled. It's from these kinds of fragmentary pieces that you're trying to work out the histories of entire species. It's quite a tall order. We really have very little idea of the relationships between many ancient species which led to us and which were evolutionary dead ends. Some probably don't deserve to be regarded as separate species at all.”
― A Short History of Nearly Everything
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