The World, the Universe and Us

How ancient humans crossed the vast ocean; Brain training for dementia; Life of science legend Maggie Aderin

18 snips
Feb 13, 2026
Maggie Aderin, space scientist and TV presenter, shares stories from a life among the stars. Michael Marshall, science reporter, unpacks astonishing evidence that Stone Age people planned night-time sea voyages to islands like Malta. They explore ancient navigation, long sea crossings, and the wonder of stargazing inspiring exploration.
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INSIGHT

Stone-Age Open-Ocean Navigation

  • Malta is remote enough that reaching it required open-ocean navigation beyond the horizon around 8,500 years ago.
  • This implies Stone Age hunter-gatherers had sophisticated seafaring and navigational knowledge.
ANECDOTE

The Pesse Canoe—Oldest Known Boat

  • The Pesse Canoe, about 10,000 years old, is a hollowed tree trunk and the oldest known boat.
  • It highlights how early craft could be simple yet seaworthy for some journeys.
INSIGHT

Frequency Distinguishes Accident From Intent

  • Hominins on distant islands (e.g., Luzon, Sulawesi) raise debate between accidental rafting and deliberate seafaring.
  • Frequency and timing of crossings help distinguish chance events from intentional colonisation.
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