Not exact matches
As one of the world's leading authorities on
ancient seafaring, he has devoted much of his career to
hunting down hard evidence of
ancient human migrations, searching for something most archaeologists long thought a figment:
Ice Age mariners.
Strachan talks to ArtReview about his multi-faceted work exploring climate change, frontier exploration and cultural difference via neon sculpture, cloned polar
ice chunks and a Nassau school choir performing an
ancient Inuit
hunting song.
Warming temperatures are melting patches of
ice that have been in place for thousands of years in the mountains of the Canadian High Arctic and in turn revealing a treasure trove of
ancient hunting tools.