As co-founder of the expedition that discovered Lucy, and leader of most of the first site-surveys in the Afar Depression in Ethiopia, Jon Kalb has years of experience with the region, its politics, and the scientists involved in the excavations. A participant himself in the "bone wars" that accompanied these discoveries, Kalb recounts the cutthroat competition and back stabbing that were often part of the media-highlighted race to find the oldest hominid fossil. He weaves this story in the rich fabric of Ethiopian society and politics, the plight of the regions peoples, and the international maneuverings for control of the fossil finds.
Jon Kalb, born August 17, 1941, in Houston, Texas, is a research geologist (ret) with the Vertebrate Paleontology Laboratory (Texas Memorial Museum), University of Texas at Austin. He received a pre-doctoral fellowship from the Carnegie Geophysical Laboratory in 1968, a graduate fellowship from [[Johns Hopkins University]] in 1969, and a B Sc. from American University in 1970. Kalb was a founder of the International Afar Research Expedition that recovered the 3.3 million year old Lucy skeleton, and later director of the Ethiopia-based mission that pioneered explorations in the Middle Awash, revealing some of the most prolific deposits bearing early hominid fossils and artifacts in the world. Discoveries included a nearly complete hyper-robust skull of a 600,000-year-old pre-Neanderthal. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Kalb
Warning: This book is a slog for the first 50-100 pages. I almost gave up on it, which is incredibly rare for me. The topic is geology and Kalb is a geologist, so he provides incredibly detailed descriptions of the terrain they're exploring. Yes, geology has a HUGE impact on dating hominid remains, and you'll appreciate some of his later descriptions on how he dated fossils in the Awash Valley because it involves reconstructing multiple shifted layers from the intersection of three tectonic plates. But the first 50 pages or so was REALLY dry reading that made me worry about the rest of the book.
Fortunately, it picks up shortly after those terrain descriptions end. There's infighting among researchers, accusations of CIA links, fighting between researchers from different nations, fighting to get Ethiopians trained to do their own field work, fighting with the Ethiopian government and the local chieftains to even have the right to excavate. Oh, it's all very political, complicated and tiring, but it makes for an EXCELLENT read. It also serves to remind those of us who read science books that it's as messy a discipline as literature studies.
Read this one if you like exciting African adventure combined with political and personal intrigue. (Science like anything else IS all politics.)