Author

Publication

2007 - Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, NY

Language

English

Word Count

48,500 words, Guess

Page Count

194 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • Goodreads1022281
  • LibraryThing2944142

Classifications

  • LCCQE

Description

The Great Rift Valley, which runs some three thousand miles from Syria to Mozambique, is one of the earth's most extraordinary geological features. The result of Syria's split from the African continent fifteen million years ago, this great "crack in the earth" crosses Jordan, Syria, Israel, Tanzania, Ethiopia, and Kenya. In 2004, Israeli journalist Haim Watzman set out to explore the northern part of the Rift Valley, where he had lived for nearly two and a half decades. He interviewed a number of scientific experts: a zoologist fascinated by the behavioral patterns of indigenous birds; an archaeologist trying to re-create the standing stone formations left to us by ancient cultures; a geologist speculating on the valley's origins. Watzman raises provocative questions about the nature of this massive feature in the earth's crust: where it comes from, how it has developed, and how human civilization has fared on its shores. "Humankind has overlaid the geology not just with cities, dams, fields, and roads," he writes, "but also with history and biography and meanings."

Subjects

Other Editions

  • A crack in the earth: a journey up Israel's Rift ValleyFarrar, Straus and Giroux2007-01-01

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