The (braile) book* I have started reading is, 'Origins: How The World Made Us' by Lewis Dartnell, who is a professor at Westminster University and part of his job is communicating science to a wider audience.
So far it is very interesting. I am hoping that somewhere he will explain how, since Homo sapienssapiens left Africa about 40,000 years ago and then spread throughout the world, why there is such variation in skin pigmentation, eye shape, etc that could have evolved by natural selection in such what seems like a comparatively short time; while at the same time we are all still one species, able to interbreed. I can understand (as he has already said, that homo erectus left Africa and spread very widely long before that, and that Neanderthals were settled and thriving in Europe and wider, also that for some reason when homo sapienssapiens came along they disappeared comparatively quickly, but that 40,000 years is a puzzle.
I've been trying to work out how many generations there must have been in 40,000 years. If I take 4 generations per 100 years and multiply by 10 for 1000 years, that makes400,000 generations, then by 40 to get to the 40,000 years ... well, I'm foundering because I can't really do that on a piece of paper!!
I wonder if any of that makes any sense and if anyone has any thoughts on this as I would be most interested to hear.
*The NLB have changed braille books. Instead of making this book into 7 volumes with a spiral at the centre, and each volume in its plastic, hard folder, they have a new machine which prints a book as requested (and if available of coursse) into double the number of books, stapled non-returnable and re-cyclable.