Clive Gamble is an archaeologist and Emeritus Professor at the University of Southampton. He is currently a member of its Centre for the Archaeology of Human Origins that he founded in 2001. His recent participation in the British Academy's Centenary Project brought together archaeologists and psychologists to research when hominin brains became human minds. The results are published in Thinking Big: How the Evolution of Social Life Shaped the Human Mind (2014, with John Gowlett and Robin Dunbar). He is a Fellow of the British Academy, the Society of Antiquaries of London, and the Royal Anthropological Institute. He is President of the Prehistoric Society and from 2010-2018 was a Trustee of the British Museum.
As Gamble reveals in this compelling report, instrumental photos and even the flint itself (unearthed in the Natural History Museum at his prompting) had been overlooked until recently. Here we can read about the event...the characters, their world and the subsequent debate, detailed day by day in the text and extensive footnotes and references. If only the archaeologists had written a best-selling book at the time. Fascinating. * British Archaeology * This work delivers a fatal blow to the Victorian idea of separate spheres, clearly showing that the world views and life experiences of Evans et al. informed and influenced their ability to recognise, interpret and convince others of the evidence for the antiquity of humanity. Making deep history is archaeological storytelling at its finest, anchoring the birth of prehistory in the lives of the menDLand womenDLwho gave the world the gift of endless time. * Emily Hanscam, Journal of Antiquity * Making Deep History concerns the lives and work of four people who played a central role in the demonstration of human antiquity. [...] This entertaining book traces their biographies and the impact of their ideas - 162 years after their original discovery it does belated justice to the 'time revolutionaries'. * Richard Bradley, Current Archaeology *