Easter's End
By Jared Diamond
from http://www.discover.com
In just a few centuries, the people of Easter Island wiped out their forest,
drove their plants and animals to extinction, and saw their complex society
spiral into chaos and cannibalism. Are we about to follow their lead?
Among the most riveting mysteries of human history are those posed by vanished
civilizations. Everyone who has seen the abandoned buildings of the Khmer, the
Maya, or the Anasazi is immediately moved to ask the same question: Why did
the societies that erected those structures disappear?
Their vanishing touches us as the disappearance of other animals, even the dinosaurs,
never can. No matter how exotic those lost civilizations seem, their framers
were humans like us. Who is to say we won't succumb to the same fate? Perhaps
someday New York's skyscrapers will stand derelict and overgrown with vegetation,
like the temples at Angkor Wat and Tikal.
Among all such vanished civilizations, that of the former Polynesian society
on Easter Island remains unsurpassed in mystery and isolation. The mystery stems
especially from the island's gigantic stone statues and its impoverished landscape,
but it is enhanced by our associations with the specific people involved: Polynesians
represent for us the ultimate in exotic romance, the background for many a child's,
and an adult's, vision of paradise. My own interest in Easter was kindled over
30 years ago when I read Thor Heyerdahl's fabulous accounts of his Kon-Tiki
voyage.
But my interest has been revived recently by a much more exciting account, one
not of heroic voyages but of painstaking research and analysis. My friend David
Steadman, a paleontologist, has been working with a number of other researchers
who are carrying out the first systematic excavations on Easter intended to
identify the animals and plants that once lived there. Their work is contributing
to a new interpretation of the island's history that makes it a tale not only
of wonder but of warning as well.
Easter Island, with an area of only 64 square miles, is the world's most isolated
scrap of habitable land. It lies in the Pacific Ocean more than 2,000 miles
west of the nearest continent (South America), 1,400 miles from even the nearest
habitable island (Pitcairn). Its subtropical location and latitude--at 27 degrees
south, it is approximately as far below the equator as Houston is north of it--help
give it a rather mild climate, while its volcanic origins make its soil fertile.
In theory, this combination of blessings should have made Easter a miniature
paradise, remote from problems that beset the rest of the world.
The island derives its name from its "discovery" by the Dutch explorer
Jacob Roggeveen, on Easter (April 5) in 1722. Roggeveen's first impression was
not of a paradise but of a wasteland: "We originally, from a further distance,
have considered the said Easter Island as sandy; the reason for that is this,
that we counted as sand the withered grass, hay, or other scorched and burnt
vegetation, because its wasted appearance could give no other impression than
of a singular poverty and barrenness."
The island Roggeveen saw was a grassland without a single tree or bush over
ten feet high. Modern botanists have identified only 47 species of higher plants
native to Easter, most of them grasses, sedges, and ferns. The list includes
just two species of small trees and two of woody shrubs. With such flora, the
islanders Roggeveen encountered had no source of real firewood to warm themselves
during Easter's cool, wet, windy winters. Their native animals included nothing
larger than insects, not even a single species of native bat, land bird, land
snail, or lizard. For domestic animals, they had only chickens.
European visitors throughout the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries estimated
Easter's human population at about 2,000, a modest number considering the island's
fertility. As Captain James Cook recognized during his brief visit in 1774,
the islanders were Polynesians (a Tahitian man accompanying Cook was able to
converse with them). Yet despite the Polynesians' well-deserved fame as a great
seafaring people, the Easter Islanders who came out to Roggeveen's and Cook's
ships did so by swimming or paddling canoes that Roggeveen described as "bad
and frail." Their craft, he wrote, were "put together with manifold
small planks and light inner timbers, which they cleverly stitched together
with very fine twisted threads. . . . But as they lack the knowledge and particularly
the materials for caulking and making tight the great number of seams of the
canoes, these are accordingly very leaky, for which reason they are compelled
to spend half the time in bailing." The canoes, only ten feet long, held
at most two people, and only three or four canoes were observed on the entire
island.
With such flimsy craft, Polynesians could never have colonized Easter from even
the nearest island, nor could they have traveled far offshore to fish. The islanders
Roggeveen met were totally isolated, unaware that other people existed. Investigators
in all the years since his visit have discovered no trace of the islanders'
having any outside contacts: not a single Easter Island rock or product has
turned up elsewhere, nor has anything been found on the island that could have
been brought by anyone other than the original settlers or the Europeans. Yet
the people living on Easter claimed memories of visiting the uninhabited Sala
y Gomez reef 260 miles away, far beyond the range of the leaky canoes seen by
Roggeveen. How did the islanders' ancestors reach that reef from Easter, or
reach Easter from anywhere else?
Easter Island's most famous feature is its huge stone statues, more than 200
of which once stood on massive stone platforms lining the coast. At least 700
more, in all stages of completion, were abandoned in quarries or on ancient
roads between the quarries and the coast, as if the carvers and moving crews
had thrown down their tools and walked off the job. Most of the erected statues
were carved in a single quarry and then somehow transported as far as six miles--despite
heights as great as 33 feet and weights up to 82 tons. The abandoned statues,
meanwhile, were as much as 65 feet tall and weighed up to 270 tons. The stone
platforms were equally gigantic: up to 500 feet long and 10 feet high, with
facing slabs weighing up to 10 tons.
Roggeveen himself quickly recognized the problem the statues posed: "The
stone images at first caused us to be struck with astonishment," he wrote,
"because we could not comprehend how it was possible that these people,
who are devoid of heavy thick timber for making any machines, as well as strong
ropes, nevertheless had been able to erect such images." Roggeveen might
have added that the islanders had no wheels, no draft animals, and no source
of power except their own muscles. How did they transport the giant statues
for miles, even before erecting them? To deepen the mystery, the statues were
still standing in 1770, but by 1864 all of them had been pulled down, by the
islanders themselves. Why then did they carve them in the first place? And why
did they stop?
The statues imply a society very different from the one Roggeveen saw in 1722.
Their sheer number and size suggest a population much larger than 2,000 people.
What became of everyone? Furthermore, that society must have been highly organized.
Easter's resources were scattered across the island: the best stone for the
statues was quarried at Rano Raraku near Easter's northeast end; red stone,
used for large crowns adorning some of the statues, was quarried at Puna Pau,
inland in the southwest; stone carving tools came mostly from Aroi in the northwest.
Meanwhile, the best farmland lay in the south and east, and the best fishing
grounds on the north and west coasts. Extracting and redistributing all those
goods required complex political organization. What happened to that organization,
and how could it ever have arisen in such a barren landscape?
Easter Island's mysteries have spawned volumes of speculation for more than
two and a half centuries. Many Europeans were incredulous that Polynesians--commonly
characterized as "mere savages"--could have created the statues or
the beautifully constructed stone platforms. In the 1950s, Heyerdahl argued
that Polynesia must have been settled by advanced societies of American Indians,
who in turn must have received civilization across the Atlantic from more advanced
societies of the Old World. Heyerdahl's raft voyages aimed to prove the feasibility
of such prehistoric transoceanic contacts. In the 1960s the Swiss writer Erich
von Däniken, an ardent believer in Earth visits by extraterrestrial astronauts,
went further, claiming that Easter's statues were the work of intelligent beings
who owned ultramodern tools, became stranded on Easter, and were finally rescued.
Heyerdahl and Von Däniken both brushed aside overwhelming evidence that
the Easter Islanders were typical Polynesians derived from Asia rather than
from the Americas and that their culture (including their statues) grew out
of Polynesian culture. Their language was Polynesian, as Cook had already concluded.
Specifically, they spoke an eastern Polynesian dialect related to Hawaiian and
Marquesan, a dialect isolated since about A.D. 400, as estimated from slight
differences in vocabulary. Their fishhooks and stone adzes resembled early Marquesan
models. Last year DNA extracted from 12 Easter Island skeletons was also shown
to be Polynesian. The islanders grew bananas, taro, sweet potatoes, sugarcane,
and paper mulberry--typical Polynesian crops, mostly of Southeast Asian origin.
Their sole domestic animal, the chicken, was also typically Polynesian and ultimately
Asian, as were the rats that arrived as stowaways in the canoes of the first
settlers.
What happened to those settlers? The fanciful theories of the past must give
way to evidence gathered by hardworking practitioners in three fields: archeology,
pollen analysis, and paleontology.
Modern archeological excavations on Easter have continued since Heyerdahl's
1955 expedition. The earliest radiocarbon dates associated with human activities
are around A.D. 400 to 700, in reasonable agreement with the approximate settlement
date of 400 estimated by linguists. The period of statue construction peaked
around 1200 to 1500, with few if any statues erected thereafter. Densities of
archeological sites suggest a large population; an estimate of 7,000 people
is widely quoted by archeologists, but other estimates range up to 20,000, which
does not seem implausible for an island of Easter's area and fertility.
Archeologists have also enlisted surviving islanders in experiments aimed at
figuring out how the statues might have been carved and erected. Twenty people,
using only stone chisels, could have carved even the largest completed statue
within a year. Given enough timber and fiber for making ropes, teams of at most
a few hundred people could have loaded the statues onto wooden sleds, dragged
them over lubricated wooden tracks or rollers, and used logs as levers to maneuver
them into a standing position. Rope could have been made from the fiber of a
small native tree, related to the linden, called the hauhau. However, that tree
is now extremely scarce on Easter, and hauling one statue would have required
hundreds of yards of rope. Did Easter's now barren landscape once support the
necessary trees?
That question can be answered by the technique of pollen analysis, which involves
boring out a column of sediment from a swamp or pond, with the most recent deposits
at the top and relatively more ancient deposits at the bottom. The absolute
age of each layer can be dated by radiocarbon methods. Then begins the hard
work: examining tens of thousands of pollen grains under a microscope, counting
them, and identifying the plant species that produced each one by comparing
the grains with modern pollen from known plant species. For Easter Island, the
bleary-eyed scientists who performed that task were John Flenley, now at Massey
University in New Zealand, and Sarah King of the University of Hull in England.
Flenley and King's heroic efforts were rewarded by the striking new picture
that emerged of Easter's prehistoric landscape. For at least 30,000 years before
human arrival and during the early years of Polynesian settlement, Easter was
not a wasteland at all. Instead, a subtropical forest of trees and woody bushes
towered over a ground layer of shrubs, herbs, ferns, and grasses. In the forest
grew tree daisies, the rope- yielding hauhau tree, and the toromiro tree, which
furnishes a dense, mesquite-like firewood. The most common tree in the forest
was a species of palm now absent on Easter but formerly so abundant that the
bottom strata of the sediment column were packed with its pollen. The Easter
Island palm was closely related to the still-surviving Chilean wine palm, which
grows up to 82 feet tall and 6 feet in diameter. The tall, unbranched trunks
of the Easter Island palm would have been ideal for transporting and erecting
statues and constructing large canoes. The palm would also have been a valuable
food source, since its Chilean relative yields edible nuts as well as sap from
which Chileans make sugar, syrup, honey, and wine.
What did the first settlers of Easter Island eat when they were not glutting
themselves on the local equivalent of maple syrup? Recent excavations by David
Steadman, of the New York State Museum at Albany, have yielded a picture of
Easter's original animal world as surprising as Flenley and King's picture of
its plant world. Steadman's expectations for Easter were conditioned by his
experiences elsewhere in Polynesia, where fish are overwhelmingly the main food
at archeological sites, typically accounting for more than 90 percent of the
bones in ancient Polynesian garbage heaps. Easter, though, is too cool for the
coral reefs beloved by fish, and its cliff-girded coastline permits shallow-water
fishing in only a few places. Less than a quarter of the bones in its early
garbage heaps (from the period 900 to 1300) belonged to fish; instead, nearly
one-third of all bones came from porpoises.
Nowhere else in Polynesia do porpoises account for even 1 percent of discarded
food bones. But most other Polynesian islands offered animal food in the form
of birds and mammals, such as New Zealand's now extinct giant moas and Hawaii's
now extinct flightless geese. Most other islanders also had domestic pigs and
dogs. On Easter, porpoises would have been the largest animal available--other
than humans. The porpoise species identified at Easter, the common dolphin,
weighs up to 165 pounds. It generally lives out at sea, so it could not have
been hunted by line fishing or spearfishing from shore. Instead, it must have
been harpooned far offshore, in big seaworthy canoes built from the extinct
palm tree.
In addition to porpoise meat, Steadman found, the early Polynesian settlers
were feasting on seabirds. For those birds, Easter's remoteness and lack of
predators made it an ideal haven as a breeding site, at least until humans arrived.
Among the prodigious numbers of seabirds that bred on Easter were albatross,
boobies, frigate birds, fulmars, petrels, prions, shearwaters, storm petrels,
terns, and tropic birds. With at least 25 nesting species, Easter was the richest
seabird breeding site in Polynesia and probably in the whole Pacific.
Land birds as well went into early Easter Island cooking pots. Steadman identified
bones of at least six species, including barn owls, herons, parrots, and rail.
Bird stew would have been seasoned with meat from large numbers of rats, which
the Polynesian colonists inadvertently brought with them; Easter Island is the
sole known Polynesian island where rat bones outnumber fish bones at archeological
sites. (In case you're squeamish and consider rats inedible, I still recall
recipes for creamed laboratory rat that my British biologist friends used to
supplement their diet during their years of wartime food rationing.)
Porpoises, seabirds, land birds, and rats did not complete the list of meat
sources formerly available on Easter. A few bones hint at the possibility of
breeding seal colonies as well. All these delicacies were cooked in ovens fired
by wood from the island's forests.
Such evidence lets us imagine the island onto which Easter's first Polynesian
colonists stepped ashore some 1,600 years ago, after a long canoe voyage from
eastern Polynesia. They found themselves in a pristine paradise. What then happened
to it? The pollen grains and the bones yield a grim answer.
Pollen records show that destruction of Easter's forests was well under way
by the year 800, just a few centuries after the start of human settlement. Then
charcoal from wood fires came to fill the sediment cores, while pollen of palms
and other trees and woody shrubs decreased or disappeared, and pollen of the
grasses that replaced the forest became more abundant. Not long after 1400 the
palm finally became extinct, not only as a result of being chopped down but
also because the now ubiquitous rats prevented its regeneration: of the dozens
of preserved palm nuts discovered in caves on Easter, all had been chewed by
rats and could no longer germinate. While the hauhau tree did not become extinct
in Polynesian times, its numbers declined drastically until there weren't enough
left to make ropes from. By the time Heyerdahl visited Easter, only a single,
nearly dead toromiro tree remained on the island, and even that lone survivor
has now disappeared. (Fortunately, the toromiro still grows in botanical gardens
elsewhere.)
The fifteenth century marked the end not only for Easter's palm but for the
forest itself. Its doom had been approaching as people cleared land to plant
gardens; as they felled trees to build canoes, to transport and erect statues,
and to burn; as rats devoured seeds; and probably as the native birds died out
that had pollinated the trees' flowers and dispersed their fruit. The overall
picture is among the most extreme examples of forest destruction anywhere in
the world: the whole forest gone, and most of its tree species extinct.
The destruction of the island's animals was as extreme as that of the forest:
without exception, every species of native land bird became extinct. Even shellfish
were overexploited, until people had to settle for small sea snails instead
of larger cowries. Porpoise bones disappeared abruptly from garbage heaps around
1500; no one could harpoon porpoises anymore, since the trees used for constructing
the big seagoing canoes no longer existed. The colonies of more than half of
the seabird species breeding on Easter or on its offshore islets were wiped
out.
In place of these meat supplies, the Easter Islanders intensified their production
of chickens, which had been only an occasional food item. They also turned to
the largest remaining meat source available: humans, whose bones became common
in late Easter Island garbage heaps. Oral traditions of the islanders are rife
with cannibalism; the most inflammatory taunt that could be snarled at an enemy
was "The flesh of your mother sticks between my teeth." With no wood
available to cook these new goodies, the islanders resorted to sugarcane scraps,
grass, and sedges to fuel their fires.
All these strands of evidence can be wound into a coherent narrative of a society's
decline and fall. The first Polynesian colonists found themselves on an island
with fertile soil, abundant food, bountiful building materials, ample lebensraum,
and all the prerequisites for comfortable living. They prospered and multiplied.
After a few centuries, they began erecting stone statues on platforms, like
the ones their Polynesian forebears had carved. With passing years, the statues
and platforms became larger and larger, and the statues began sporting ten-ton
red crowns--probably in an escalating spiral of one-upmanship, as rival clans
tried to surpass each other with shows of wealth and power. (In the same way,
successive Egyptian pharaohs built ever-larger pyramids. Today Hollywood movie
moguls near my home in Los Angeles are displaying their wealth and power by
building ever more ostentatious mansions. Tycoon Marvin Davis topped previous
moguls with plans for a 50,000-square-foot house, so now Aaron Spelling has
topped Davis with a 56,000-square-foot house. All that those buildings lack
to make the message explicit are ten-ton red crowns.) On Easter, as in modern
America, society was held together by a complex political system to redistribute
locally available resources and to integrate the economies of different areas.
Eventually Easter's growing population was cutting the forest more rapidly than
the forest was regenerating. The people used the land for gardens and the wood
for fuel, canoes, and houses--and, of course, for lugging statues. As forest
disappeared, the islanders ran out of timber and rope to transport and erect
their statues. Life became more uncomfortable-- springs and streams dried up,
and wood was no longer available for fires.
People also found it harder to fill their stomachs, as land birds, large sea
snails, and many seabirds disappeared. Because timber for building seagoing
canoes vanished, fish catches declined and porpoises disappeared from the table.
Crop yields also declined, since deforestation allowed the soil to be eroded
by rain and wind, dried by the sun, and its nutrients to be leeched from it.
Intensified chicken production and cannibalism replaced only part of all those
lost foods. Preserved statuettes with sunken cheeks and visible ribs suggest
that people were starving.
With the disappearance of food surpluses, Easter Island could no longer feed
the chiefs, bureaucrats, and priests who had kept a complex society running.
Surviving islanders described to early European visitors how local chaos replaced
centralized government and a warrior class took over from the hereditary chiefs.
The stone points of spears and daggers, made by the warriors during their heyday
in the 1600s and 1700s, still litter the ground of Easter today. By around 1700,
the population began to crash toward between one-quarter and one-tenth of its
former number. People took to living in caves for protection against their enemies.
Around 1770 rival clans started to topple each other's statues, breaking the
heads off. By 1864 the last statue had been thrown down and desecrated.
As we try to imagine the decline of Easter's civilization, we ask ourselves,
"Why didn't they look around, realize what they were doing, and stop before
it was too late? What were they thinking when they cut down the last palm tree?"
I suspect, though, that the disaster happened not with a bang but with a whimper.
After all, there are those hundreds of abandoned statues to consider. The forest
the islanders depended on for rollers and rope didn't simply disappear one day--it
vanished slowly, over decades. Perhaps war interrupted the moving teams; perhaps
by the time the carvers had finished their work, the last rope snapped. In the
meantime, any islander who tried to warn about the dangers of progressive deforestation
would have been overridden by vested interests of carvers, bureaucrats, and
chiefs, whose jobs depended on continued deforestation. Our Pacific Northwest
loggers are only the latest in a long line of loggers to cry, "Jobs over
trees!" The changes in forest cover from year to year would have been hard
to detect: yes, this year we cleared those woods over there, but trees are starting
to grow back again on this abandoned garden site here. Only older people, recollecting
their childhoods decades earlier, could have recognized a difference. Their
children could no more have comprehended their parents' tales than my eight-year-old
sons today can comprehend my wife's and my tales of what Los Angeles was like
30 years ago.
Gradually trees became fewer, smaller, and less important. By the time the last
fruit-bearing adult palm tree was cut, palms had long since ceased to be of
economic significance. That left only smaller and smaller palm saplings to clear
each year, along with other bushes and treelets. No one would have noticed the
felling of the last small palm.
By now the meaning of easter Island for us should be chillingly obvious. Easter
Island is Earth writ small. Today, again, a rising population confronts shrinking
resources. We too have no emigration valve, because all human societies are
linked by international transport, and we can no more escape into space than
the Easter Islanders could flee into the ocean. If we continue to follow our
present course, we shall have exhausted the world's major fisheries, tropical
rain forests, fossil fuels, and much of our soil by the time my sons reach my
current age.
Every day newspapers report details of famished countries-- Afghanistan, Liberia,
Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Somalia, the former Yugoslavia, Zaire--where soldiers
have appropriated the wealth or where central government is yielding to local
gangs of thugs. With the risk of nuclear war receding, the threat of our ending
with a bang no longer has a chance of galvanizing us to halt our course. Our
risk now is of winding down, slowly, in a whimper. Corrective action is blocked
by vested interests, by well-intentioned political and business leaders, and
by their electorates, all of whom are perfectly correct in not noticing big
changes from year to year. Instead, each year there are just somewhat more people,
and somewhat fewer resources, on Earth.
It would be easy to close our eyes or to give up in despair. If mere thousands
of Easter Islanders with only stone tools and their own muscle power sufficed
to destroy their society, how can billions of people with metal tools and machine
power fail to do worse? But there is one crucial difference. The Easter Islanders
had no books and no histories of other doomed societies. Unlike the Easter Islanders,
we have histories of the past--information that can save us. My main hope for
my sons' generation is that we may now choose to learn from the fates of societies
like Easter's.
- August 1995