The 10,000 Year Explosion

How Civilization Accelerated Human Evolution

Gregory Cochran

Recommended By

Book Synopsis

"The 10,000 Year Explosion" by Gregory Cochran is a fascinating exploration of human evolution and the impact of genetic adaptation on our species. In this thought-provoking book, Cochran and his co-author, Henry Harpending, challenge conventional theories by presenting evidence suggesting that genetic changes have occurred at an accelerating pace in the past 10,000 years.

Drawing from archaeological, genetic, and historical data, the authors argue that human populations have continuously undergone genetic adaptations in response to new environments, cultural developments, and technological advancements. They shed light on the influence of agriculture, disease, and the rise of civilization as key factors driving these genetic changes.

Cochran and Harpending delve into specific examples, such as the genetic adaptations to lactose tolerance, resistance to malaria, and the evolution of higher intelligence among certain populations. They discuss the spread of advantageous genes through migration, interbreeding, and natural selection, leading to diverse genetic profiles in different regions of the world.

This thought-provoking book challenges the notion of human evolution as a static process and suggests that our genetic makeup is still subject to ongoing changes. The authors also address the implications of these genetic adaptations for understanding complex diseases, such as cancer and mental disorders, as well as potential implications for future human evolution.

"The 10,000 Year Explosion" offers a compelling and accessible narrative that engages readers with its captivating insights into the dynamic nature of human genetics and evolution. Cochran and Harpending's research provides a refreshing perspective on the profound impact of genetics on human history and invites readers to reconsider long-held beliefs about the pace and extent of our species' evolutionary journey.

Explore More Books

See All
Capital Ideas
Scotland
The Age of Entitlement
Mohammed and Charlemagne
Feeding the Dragon
Who We Are and How We Got Here
Frisco Kid
The Plant Paradox
The New Economics
The Warren Buffett Way
Live Your Truth
What We Owe the Future
With the Old Breed
The Greatness Mindset
Werner Herzog - A Guide for the Perplexed
Amusing Ourselves to Death
The Razor's Edge
The Little Prince
Lifespan
Foundation
The First Conspiracy
Proof of Corruption
Karl Marx's Theory of History
Masters of the Word
Black Flags
Thermoinfocomplexity
Fewer
Mathematics: Its Content, Methods and Meaning
The American Challenge
The Network State
Bel Canto
Mao
The Victorian Internet
Spain in Our Hearts
Asset Management
The Sovereign Individual
The French Revolution and What Went Wrong
Confessions of a Philosopher
The Innovators
Misbehaving
All Marketers are Liars
Off The Record
The Pleasure of Finding Things Out
Programming Bitcoin
A Random Walk Down Wall Street
The Great CEO Within
Founders' Son
Think Like a Monk
The Last Lion
Why We Believe in God(s)
The Poems of Dylan Thomas
Home Game
Platform Revolution
The Ethics of Money Production
Loonshots
In the Heart of the Sea
A Magic Web
21 Lessons for the 21st Century
The Little Bitcoin Book
The Sketchbooks of Chris Wilkinson
A Time for New Dreams
The Making of the Atomic Bomb
Thing Explainer
Monetizing Innovation
The Right Stuff
The Great War of Our Time
Our Mathematical Universe
Direct Truth
What You Want
Connectography
Why America Is Not a New Rome
The World According to Garp
Water in Plain Sight
An American Marriage
P53
Levels of the Game
The End of Power
Invariances
Think Like a Rocket Scientist
How to Be Topp
Intellectuals and Race
Hopping Over The Rabbit Hole
The Story of Civilization: Caesar and Christ
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
House On Fire
Personal Knowledge
From Third World to First
Little, Big
The Sports Gene
First a Dream
Innovating Out of Crisis
Team of Rivals
Disruptor
The Score Takes Care of Itself
As One Is
Where Mountains Roar
Justice on Trial
Return to the Little Kingdom
Mastery
Lords of Finance