Shermer: This is a wild story for you. I wrote about this radio in one of my scientific american columns. It was given to my wife by her grandfather. She inherited when he died, but they spent a lot of she was raised by a single mom and d an, her mam's dead, soid her grandfather. When she left germany to come to America to be with me, she shipped this radio. He was dead and hadn't worked in decades. And the day we got married, it just spontaneously turned on,. Just like right now, except right now it was static. But the day we got wedding, it came on. It was playing really
In a few decades, a torrent of new evidence and ideas about human evolution has allowed scientists to piece together a more detailed understanding of what went on thousands and even millions of years ago. Lesley Newson and Peter Richerson, a husband-and-wife team based at the University of California, Davis, have spent years together and individually researching and collaborating with scholars from a wide range of disciplines to produce a deep history of humankind. In A Story of Us, they present this rich narrative and explain how the evolution of our genes relates to the evolution of our cultures.