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Easter%20Island:%20Multiple%20Lessons

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Easter Island: Multiple Lessons Environmental Suicide (Diamond) or something else? * Easter Island was annexed by Chile in 1888. It lies 3510 km west of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Easter%20Island:%20Multiple%20Lessons


1
Easter Island Multiple Lessons
  • Environmental Suicide (Diamond) or something
    else?

2
Very Isolated
Easter Island was annexed by Chile in 1888. It
lies 3510 km west of the Chilean mainland.
3
Easter Day in 1722
  • Imagine what the first Dutch explorers
  • thought when they first accidentally
  • sailed to Rapa Nui (Easter Island)
  • and saw the statues.

4
Statistics
  • Rapa Nui (Easter Island)is 5 hours (3600 km) by
    jet airplane from Chile (2000km from the closest
    inhabited island).
  • The island is triangular and about 20 kilometers
    long. (27S)
  • Some statues weigh over 100 tons (the largest
    were close to 10 meters high).
  • Hundreds (887) of statues all around the island.

5
How did it fall apart?
  • There is clear evidence that Easter Island once
    was a heavily populated (perhaps 20,000 people)
    and rich society.
  • In 1772 the population was estimated at 2500
  • There is clear evidence that this big population
    collapsed and most of the population died.
  • Collapse triggers? Natural or Culturally
    induced?

6
Collapse Generic Story
  • Natives came originally from Polynesia -probably
    accidentally found Rapa Nui (Easter Island) while
    they were lost.
  • Statues were built by natives cut from soft
    volcanic stone on the island.
  • Society collapsed before the Europeans arrived
    caused by overpopulation and poor use of resources

7
Geography
Roughly triangular in shape with complex
topography (locally isolated valleys) and has 3
major volcanoes.
8
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9
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10
Settlement of the Pacific Islands
1000 B.C.
600 A.D.
500 B.C.
600 A.D.
1200 A.D.
800 A.D.
900 A.D.
The Pacific Islands were settled from the
northwest, probably from Asia and Melanesia, in a
series of waves in westerly, then northerly
(Hawaii) and southerly (New Zealand) directions
But maybe 400 AD and this is crucial to collapse
interpretation
11
Moai
  • Easter Island has hundreds of large stone statues
    (moai).
  • 13-32 feet tall
  • 10-87 tons in weight

12
Thriving Population
  • Evidence suggests that Easter Island had a large
    and rich thriving society.
  • Many house foundations (enough for 20-30K people)
  • Agricultural Intensification (large composting
    pits, water dams, stone chicken houses, stone
    windbreaks) suggests a lot of food was needed and
    grown.
  • Society was broken into
  • 11-12 territories or clans
  • (requires a critical mass population
  • For such fragmentation. ?
  • 800 people per square mile.

13
No Collapse
  • Rapa Nui (Easter Island) must have seemed like
    paradise to the first natives of perhaps 100
    people.
  • Forests
  • Seafood
  • Plenty of space

14
Clues to Deterioration
  • Pollen in soil samples can show how plant life
    changes over time.
  • Bones of animals show that less and less fish was
    eaten as time advanced.
  • Bones of humans show evidence of cannibalism.

15
A statue based economy
  • Constructed in 3 waves 1100 A.D.
  • Statues grew larger and more elaborate as time
    went by ? some kind of clan one ups-manship ?
    fairly weird
  • Economy centered around statue building
  • Many roads
  • Clan based niches in statue production
  • Food production concentrated to free up labor for
    statue construction

16
Why so zealous?
  • The stone on Easter Island is the best carving
    stone in the Pacific
  • Society was isolated, so the energy expended in
    other Pacific societies (trading, raiding,
    exploration, and colonization) was directed
    inward
  • Chiefs got stature not by inter-island
    interaction but by competing for status by a game
    of statue one-upman-ship
  • Later ones had a pukao, or large stone hat
  • Clan based society, let each clan specialize so
    while each group had a monopoly on some item,
    trade between groups was the norm.

17
Statue Physics

All these methods require the use of Logs
18
How were they raised?
  1. Transport, Raising, and Food Production issues
    suggest that many trees were cut down to provide
    for statue production and to clear land for food
    production.
  2. When discovered in the early 1800s there were no
    trees on Easter Island
  3. Did Deforestation lead to the collapse?

19
An Abrupt end
  • Statue building, and the complex Easter Island
    society ended abruptly about 1600 A.D.
  • Incomplete statues still embedded in quarry
  • Total number of moai on Easter Island 887
  • Total number of maoi that were successfully
    transported to their final ahu locations 288
    (32 of 887)
  • Total number of moai still in the Rano Raraku
    quarry 397 (45)
  • Total number of moai lying 'in transit' outside
    of the Rano Raraku quarry 92 (10)
  • Stone carving tools left to lie
  • Chicken houses abandonded
  • Roads left in disrepair
  • What happened?

20
Collapse Standard Scenario
  • Forests Gone
  • No trees on island when discovered by Europeans
  • Pollen analysis shows that indigenous palm trees
    were grown in the time of early settlers
  • large areas given over to food production (upland
    farms)
  • Food supply limited
  • upland farms abandoned
  • analysis shows large game birds disappeared
  • Large fish and seal bones also disappeared (no
    trees, no canoes, no deep water fishing)
  • Fuel supply limited
  • carbon tested early fires were trees, later fires
    were grasses
  • Erosion
  • soil eroded from base of statues,
  • Unrest
  • In the last days statues of rival clans were torn
    down

21
Reasons for collapse
  • Cults formed and statues were built to worship
    the cults.
  • Many trees were cut down in order to move the
    statues (log rolling compare to Stonehenge)
  • Rats ate the seeds leaving the island without
    trees
  • Boats slowly disappeared so people could no
    longer fish.
  • The soil washed into the sea (tropical
    thunderstorms) because there were no trees ? no
    means to farm.
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