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Wednesday, June 19, 2013
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    What's this?
Man begins 7-year walk to trace ancient human migration
Journalist Paul Salopek has begun a long trek on foot to retrace the path that early humans took to get from Africa to the rest of the world.

By

Megan Gannon, LiveScience
Mon, Jan 21 2013 at 4:20 PM

Related Topics:

Science, Travel

Photo: Pulitzer Center.org

Paul Salopek has a long walk ahead of him. The 50-year-old journalist left a small Ethiopian village on foot on Jan. 10, planning to retrace the steps of humans' migration from Africa until he gets to Tierra del Fuego, at the southern tip of Chile.
 
The 21,000-mile journey — which will cross 30 borders and dozens of languages and ethnic groups — will take Salopek seven years.
 
By today's standards, that's a long time, but the same trek took ancient humans many generations and thousands of years. When and how our ancestors dispersed out of Africa has long proven controversial, though it is generally believed that they slowly spread into the Middle East about 60,000 years ago, and while some branched off and headed to Europe, others migrated eastward into Asia, crossed a land-ice bridge that once spanned the Bering Strait and traveled down the length of the New World.
 
Besides getting in a vessel to take him from Russia to Alaska, Salopek will mimic this epic voyage on foot. He started out in Herto Bouri, a village in Ethiopia's Middle Awash valley, which has the longest and most continuous record of human evolution of any place on Earth. Though he's using the past as a road map, Salopek has emphasized that his goal is to report on current global stories at a slower pace and from a different perspective than they are usually covered.
 
"Often the places that we fly over or drive through, they aren't just untold stories, but they are also the connective tissues between the stories of the day," Salopek told the Associated Press. (Watch a video of Salopek explaining this theory below.)
 

 
National Geographic, one of the backers of Salopek's "Out of Eden" walk, says it will publish his dispatches from the journey. The journalist is carrying just a backpack with some camping equipment and high-tech communications' gear, including a lightweight laptop and a GPS device.
 
Salopek told CBC Radio last week that he is planning to use some social media throughout the walk, though he won't be microblogging. In his last tweet before starting the trip, Salopek posted a picture of his house keys.
 
"Existential question before a 7-year walk: Take or leave house keys?" he wrote.
 
Read about other innovators and ideas at The Leaderboard. If you have a story suggestion for this year-long project, please contact us.
 
 
Related on LiveScience and MNN:
  • Top 10 Mysteries of the First Humans
  • Image Gallery: One-of-a-Kind Places on Earth
  • Know Your Roots? Human Evolution Quiz
  • MNN: Human hands evolved for fighting
 
This story was originally written for LiveScience and is reprinted with permission here. Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

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Gogoi's picture
Gogoi Mar 03 2013 at 4:58 AM

fantastic effort

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