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Are we...related?
The Guardian Weekly
|January 13, 2023
Chris Stringer tells how his remarkable quest as a young researcher transformed understanding of our species
AS WITH SO MANY OTHER CAREERS, chance played a major role in my pursuit of science. After a childhood in which I displayed a disquieting interest in skulls and stories about Neanderthals, I was – after a challenging stint as a supply teacher in east Lon-don in 1966 – about to train as a doctor at London hospital medical college when I discovered there was actually a university subject called “anthropology”.
The course included archaeology as well as studies of fossils. My parents were unsure but in the end backed my switch away from medicine. I started a course – at University College London – that included behind-the-scenes visits to London’s Natural History Museum.
There I was shown genuine human fossils, including a Neanderthal skull from Gibraltar. I thought I had died and gone to heaven.
I graduated in 1969, when there was a lack of research opportunities in my field. Indeed, I was lucky again when Don Brothwell secured me a temporary job at the Natural History Museum. I learned a lot but was about to quit academia to become a science teacher when fortune intervened once more. Palaeoanthropologist Jonathan Musgrave, from Bristol University, offered me a Ph.D. grant, and a month later I embarked on a scientific trip that would define my career, change my life – and help reassess our understanding of humanity’s distant past.
My task was straightforward but unusual. I drove my old Morris 1000 from London to Bristol and later across Europe on an 8,000-km journey around the continent, visiting museums to compare fossils of ancient Homo sapiens – such as the Cro-Magnons – with those of Neanderthals.
Bu hikaye The Guardian Weekly dergisinin January 13, 2023 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
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