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The Sheltering Desert

by Henno Martin

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"Henno Martin is a geologist who before World War II was famous for finding and supplying water to farms in Namibia. During the war he spent a two-year exile in the Namib Desert to avoid being interned by the South Africans for being German. So in 1940 he set out with a pistol, air rifle, two cars and his partner Hermann Korn. What kept them sane during those two years of survival in the desert was curiosity and mental exercise – whether they were making geological maps or discussing Darwinian evolution. The Sheltering Desert is a book about his experiences in the desert. For me the book demonstrates their deep respect and understanding of nature. When you live outside, you obtain a completely different understanding of what is around you. You observe the sun, moon and stars. You look at animal behaviour and end up seeing them as human. And when you think about humans, you see some characteristics and behaviours that would not be out of place in the wild. In the book there is a lot of discussion about evolution. Henno is constantly considering how important learning from experience during a single lifetime is compared to Darwin’s chance mutations. I can imagine how steep the learning curve would have been, surviving in the desert for two years, and I can see how Henno would have realised how much knowledge he was obtaining through daily experience and how he would wonder if this knowledge would be passed on to the next generation as a form of evolution. Reading this book made me want to read Darwin’s The Origin of Species . Martin wrote, ‘For me the most important gain of our life in the Namibia was the experience that the human mind can rise above even the most savage conditions’, which really inspired me. It is not that what we do out in the field is that adventurous, but sometimes things happen. I have been in a helicopter crash, I have been on a cliff for 24 hours with a bear waiting below me, and when these things happen you slowly realise that it is remarkable how resilient a person can be if you keep your wits about you. That is what Henno and Hermann were going through but in a much more extreme fashion. I was inspired by seeing how they coped and how they used scientific discussion to get through their experience. I still remember when our helicopter crashed in the Mackenzie Mountains of the Canadian Arctic, we jumped out of the chopper and ran for cover, and the first thing Paul Hoffman, my adviser at the time, did was start discussing the nearest rock outcrop. It was scary and comical at the time, but it was also coping, and it is amazing what you can endure when your mind is preoccupied with curiosity and a yearning to understand the natural world. In the Namib Desert, Henno’s and Hermann’s minds never stopped being active. When they felt dehydrated and weak they still carried on studying their environment, whether it was finding a new way to hunt, observing animal behaviour, or mapping where they were."
Earth History · fivebooks.com