Abstract
MR. MCINERNY attacks an old problem at a new angle. Like others before him, he would see the influence of the desert in the origin and growth of civilisation. He differs from them in making it solely responsible. In fact, the motto of his essay is “No desert, no civilisation”; and he goes so far as to suggest that any attempt to cultivate desert lands by irrigation at the present day would be a mistake and a possible danger. While it is beyond question that the formation of the great Saharan Desert was crucial in the early history of mankind, few archæologists would be prepared to follow the author in attributing the whole subsequent development of civilisation to the action of the desert areas. In Mr. McInerny's view, they have acted as laboratories for the purification of the air and the release of ozone, thus creating an atmosphere propitious to the development of intelligence and the bleaching of the skin—in short, producing the white man.
Deserts and the Birth of Civilizations.
By A. J. McInerny. Pp. 46. (Paris: Herbert Clarke, 1931.)
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Deserts and the Birth of Civilizations . Nature 128, 475 (1931). https://doi.org/10.1038/128475a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/128475a0