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Consequences of Deforestation on Easter Island
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Historical Consequences of Deforestation: Easter Island (Diamond 1995)
The history of Easter Island, its statues and its peoples, has long been shrouded in mystery. Some have suggested
that aliens marooned on earth planted the statues as signals to their fellow aliens to rescue them. Others have
said that the statues were constructed by a great race of guilders that were stranded on the island and built them
before being rescued. Still others are convinced that an ancient society with the capability of flight constructed
them along with the Nazca lines in Peru. However new evidence based on pollen analysis supports a much simpler
theory, that the Easter Island inhabitants destroyed their own society through deforestation.
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When Easter Island was "discovered" by Europeans in 1722, it was a barren landscape with no trees over
ten feet in height. The small number of inhabitants, around 2000, lived in a state of civil disorder and were thin
and emaciated. Virtually no animals besides rats inhabited the island and the natives lacked sea-worthy boats.
Understandably, the Europeans were mystified by the presence of great stone statues, some as high as 33 feet and
weighing 82 tons. Even more impressive were the abandoned statues-as tall as 65 feet and weighing as much as 270
tons. How could such a people create, and then move such enormous structures? The answer lies in Easter islands'
ecological past, when the island was not a barren place.
The Easter Island of ancient times supported a sub-tropical forest complete with the tall Easter Island Palm, a
tree suitable for building homes, canoes, and latticing necessary for the construction of such statues. With the
vegetation of the island, natives had fuelwood and the resources to make rope. With their sea-worthy canoes, Easter
Islanders lived off a steady diet of porpoise. A complex social structure developed complete with a centralized
government and religious priests.
It was this Easter Island society that built the famous statues and hauled them around the island using wooden
platforms and rope constructed from the forest. The construction of these statues peaked from 1200 to 1500 AD,
probably when the civilization was at its greatest level. However, pollen analysis shows that at this time the
tree population of the island was rapidly declining as deforestation took its toll.
Around 1400 the Easter Island palm became extinct due to overharvesting. Its capability to reproduce has become
severely limited by the proliferation of rats, introduced by the islanders when they first arrived, which ate its
seeds. In the years after the disappearance of the palm, ancient garbage piles reveal that porpoise bones declined
sharply. The islanders, no longer with the palm wood needed for canoe building, could no longer make journeys out
to sea. Consequently, the consumption of land birds, migratory birds, and mollusks increased. Soon land birds went
extinct and migratory bird numbers were severely reduced, thus spelling an end for Easter Island's forests. Already
under intense pressure by the human population for firewood and building material, the forests lost their animal
pollinators and seed dispersers with the disappearance of the birds. Today, only one of the original 22 species
of seabird still nests on Easter Island.
With the loss of their forest, the quality of life for Islanders plummeted. Streams and drinking water supplies
dried up. Crop yields declined as wind, rain, and sunlight eroded topsoils. Fires became a luxury since no wood
could be found on the island, and grasses had to be used for fuel. No longer could rope by manufactured to move
the stone statues and they were abandoned. The Easter Islanders began to starve, lacking their access to porpoise
meat and having depleted the island of birds. As life worsened, the orderly society disappeared and chaos and disarray
prevailed. Survivors formed bands and bitter fighting erupted. By the arrival of Europeans in 1722, there was almost
no sign of the great civilization that once ruled the island other than the legacy of the strange statues. However,
soon these too fell victim to the bands who desecrated the statues of rivals.
Easter Island is a prime example of what widespread deforestation can do to a society. As the forests are depleted,
the quality of life falls, and then order is lost. The example of Easter Island should be enough for us to reconsider
our current practices.
Updates
New evidence suggests that colonization of Easter Island (Rapa Nui) took place later than originally believed. The research is published in this week's issue of the journal Science.
Rats and European traders may be responsible for the mysterious demise of Easter Island according to research presented last week by a University of Hawaii anthropologist during an American Anthropological Association meeting.
Jared Diamond, a professor of geography and physiology at UCLA, has explored the mysterious demise of the people of Easter Island, one of the most isolated places on Earth. Now a new study from the Rochester Institute of Technology models the collapse of this once mighty society.
Polynesians, history's greatest seafarers who settled islands across a vast area of ocean from Madagascar to Easter Island, originated in Taiwan, according to a new genetic study published in the journal Public Library of Science Biology.
Continued: Extinction
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