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Геральд Николаевич Матюшин

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The Dawn Of Mankind

Analyzing the natural conditions that characterized the cradle of Mankind the author comes to the conclusion that the generally accepted theory where the decisive role is played by the climate and vegetation in the first emergence of Mankind does not allow to explain the entire originality of anthropogenesis. The climate and vegetation have changed repeatedly and periodically, but it did not lead to the humanization of apes, even the chimpanzee — that is very close to Man.

For the first time in this book specific peculiarities of the prehomeland of Mankind are determined (rifts, volcanoes, earthquakes, concentration of uranium deposits). The author traces the coincidence of the active manifestation of these peculiarities of the environment and changes in the biology of the anthropoids that lived there and sets forth a hypothesis that there is a connection.

The author assumes that riftogenesis and the tectonic intensity lead to baring of uranium rocks and to the formation of natural reactors of the Oklo type. Growth of the volcanic activity caused massive effusion of radioactive magma (almost all of the remains of preman and early man are covered by and mixed with volcanic deposits). A series of geomagnetic inversions that intensified cosmic radiation took place at the time of the emergence of Man from the Animal Kingdom (Gilberth and Gauss epochs). The combined impact of different factors formed zones of higher radiation in Western and Southern Africa.