Jared Diamond
Guns, Germs, and Steel
The Fates of Human Societies
An excerpt
Chapter One
Up to the Starting Line
A suitable starting point from which to compare historical
developments on the different continents is around 11,000 B.C. This
date corresponds approximately to the beginnings of village life in a
few parts of the world, the first undisputed peopling of the Americas,
the end of the Pleistocene Era and last Ice Age, and the start of what
geologists term the Recent Era. Plant and animal domestication began
in at least one part of the world within a few thousand years of that
date. As of then, did the people of some continents already have a
head start or a clear advantage over peoples of other continents?
If so, perhaps that head start, amplified over the last 13,000
years, provides the answer to Yali's question. Hence this chapter will
offer a whirlwind tour of human history on all the continents, for
millions of years, from our origins as a species until 13,000 years
ago. All that will now be summarized in less than 20 pages. Naturally,
I shall gloss over details and mention only what seem to me the trends
most relevant to this book.
Our closest living relatives are three surviving species of great
ape: the gorilla, the common chimpanzee, and the pygmy chimpanzee
(also known as bonobo). Their confinement to Africa, along with
abundant fossil evidence, indicates that the earliest stages of human
evolution were also played out in Africa. Human history, as something
separate from the history of animals, began there about 7 million
years ago (estimates range from 5 to 9 million years ago). Around that
time, a population of African apes broke up into several populations,
of which one proceeded to evolve into modern gorillas, a second into
the two modern chimps, and the third into humans. The gorilla line
apparently split off slightly before the split between the chimp and
the human lines.
Fossils indicate that the evolutionary line leading to us had
achieved a substantially upright posture by around 4 million years
ago, then began to increase in body size and in relative brain size
around 2.5 million years ago. Those protohumans are generally known
as Australopithecus africanus, Homo habilis, and Homo erectus, which
apparently evolved into each other in that sequence. Although Homo
erectus, the stage reached around 1.7 million years ago, was close to
us modern humans in body size, its brain size was still barely half of
ours. Stone tools became common around 2.5 million years ago, but they
were merely the crudest of flaked or battered stones. In zoological
significance and distinctiveness, Homo erectus was more than an ape,
but still much less than a modern human.
All of that human history, for the first 5 or 6 million years after
our origins about 7 million years ago, remained confined to
Africa. The first human ancestor to spread beyond Africa was Homo
erectus, as is attested by fossils discovered on the Southeast Asian
island of Java and conventionally known as Java man (see Figure
1.1). The oldest Java "man" fossilsof course, they may actually have
belonged to a Java womanhave usually been assumed to date from about
a million years ago. However, it has recently been argued that they
actually date from 1.8 million years ago. (Strictly speaking, the name
Homo erectus belongs to these Javan fossils, and the African fossils
classified as Homo erectus may warrant a different name.) At present,
the earliest unquestioned evidence for humans in Europe stems from
around half a million years ago, but there are claims of an earlier
presence. One would certainly assume that the colonization of Asia
also permitted the simultaneous colonization of Europe, since Eurasia
is a single landmass not bisected by major barriers.
That illustrates an issue that will recur throughout this
book. Whenever some scientist claims to have discovered "the earliest
X"whether X is the earliest human fossil in Europe, the earliest
evidence of domesticated corn in Mexico, or the earliest anything
anywherethat announcement challenges other scientists to beat the
claim by finding something still earlier. In reality, there must be
some truly "earliest X," with all claims of earlier X's being false.
However, as we shall see, for virtually any X, every year brings forth
new discoveries and claims of a purported still earlier X, along with
refutations of some or all of previous years' claims of earlier X. It
often takes decades of searching before archaeologists reach a
consensus on such questions.
By about half a million years ago, human fossils had diverged from
older Homo erectus skeletons in their enlarged, rounder, and less
angular skulls. African and European skulls of half a million years
ago were sufficiently similar to skulls of us moderns that they are
classified in our species, Homo sapiens, instead of in Homo
erectus. This distinction is necessarily arbitrary, since Homo erectus
evolved into Homo sapiens. However, these early Homo sapiens still
differed from us in skeletal details, had brains significantly smaller
than ours, and were grossly different from us in their artifacts and
behavior. Modern stone-tool-making peoples, such as Yali's
great-grandparents, would have scorned the stone tools of half a
million years ago as very crude. The only other significant addition
to our ancestors' cultural repertoire that can be documented with
confidence around that time was the use of fire.
No art, bone tool, or anything else has come down to us from early
Homo sapiens except for their skeletal remains, plus those crude stone
tools. There were still no humans in Australia, for the obvious reason
that it would have taken boats to get there from Southeast Asia. There
were also no humans anywhere in the Americas, because that would have
required the occupation of the nearest part of the Eurasian continent
(Siberia), and possibly boat-building skills as well. (The present,
shallow Bering Strait, separating Siberia from Alaska, alternated
between a strait and a broad intercontinental bridge of dry land, as
sea level repeatedly rose and fell during the Ice Ages.) However,
boat building and survival in cold Siberia were both still far beyond
the capabilities of early Homo sapiens.
After half a million years ago, the human populations of Africa and
western Eurasia proceeded to diverge from each other and from East
Asian populations in skeletal details. The population of Europe and
western Asia between 130,000 and 40,000 years ago is represented by
especially many skeletons, known as Neanderthals and sometimes
classified as a separate species, Homo neanderthalensis. Despite being
depicted in innumerable cartoons as apelike brutes living in caves,
Neanderthals had brains slightly larger than our own. They were also
the first humans to leave behind strong evidence of burying their dead
and caring for their sick. Yet their stone tools were still crude by
comparison with modern New Guineans' polished stone axes and were
usually not yet made in standardized diverse shapes, each with a
clearly recognizable function.
The few preserved African skeletal fragments contemporary with the
Neanderthals are more similar to our modern skeletons than to
Neanderthal skeletons. Even fewer preserved East Asian skeletal
fragments are known, but they appear different again from both
Africans and Neanderthals. As for the lifestyle at that time, the
best-preserved evidence comes from stone artifacts and prey bones
accumulated at southern African sites. Although those Africans of
100,000 years ago had more modern skeletons than did their Neanderthal
contemporaries, they made essentially the same crude stone tools as
Neanderthals, still lacking standardized shapes. They had no preserved
art. To judge from the bone evidence of the animal species on which
they preyed, their hunting skills were unimpressive and mainly
directed at easy-to-kill, not-at-all-dangerous animals. They were not
yet in the business of slaughtering buffalo, pigs, and other dangerous
prey. They couldn't even catch fish: their sites immediately on the
seacoast lack fish bones and fishhooks. They and their Neanderthal
contemporaries still rank as less than fully human.
Human history at last took off around 50,000 years ago, at the time
of what I have termed our Great Leap Forward. The earliest definite
signs of that leap come from East African sites with standardized
stone tools and the first preserved jewelry (ostrich-shell
beads). Similar developments soon appear in the Near East and in
southeastern Europe, then (some 40,000 years ago) in southwestern
Europe, where abundant artifacts are associated with fully modern
skeletons of people termed Cro-Magnons. Thereafter, the garbage
preserved at archaeological sites rapidly becomes more and more
interesting and leaves no doubt that we are dealing with biologically
and behaviorally modern humans.
Cro-Magnon garbage heaps yield not only stone tools but also tools
of bone, whose suitability for shaping (for instance, into fishhooks)
had apparently gone unrecognized by previous humans. Tools were
produced in diverse and distinctive shapes so modern that their
functions as needles, awls, engraving tools, and so on are obvious to
us. Instead of only single-piece tools such as hand-held scrapers,
multipiece tools made their appearance. Recognizable multipiece
weapons at Cro-Magnon sites include harpoons, spear-throwers, and
eventually bows and arrows, the precursors of rifles and other
multipiece modern weapons. Those efficient means of killing at a safe
distance permitted the hunting of such dangerous prey as rhinos and
elephants, while the invention of rope for nets, lines, and snares
allowed the addition of fish and birds to our diet. Remains of houses
and sewn clothing testify to a greatly improved ability to survive in
cold climates, and remains of jewelry and carefully buried skeletons
indicate revolutionary aesthetic and spiritual developments.
Of the Cro-Magnons' products that have been preserved, the best
known are their artworks: their magnificent cave paintings, statues,
and musical instruments, which we still appreciate as art
today. Anyone who has experienced firsthand the overwhelming power of
the life-sized painted bulls and horses in the Lascaux Cave of
southwestern France will understand at once that their creators must
have been as modern in their minds as they were in their skeletons.
Obviously, some momentous change took place in our ancestors'
capabilities between about 100,000 and 50,000 years ago. That Great
Leap Forward poses two major unresolved questions, regarding its
triggering cause and its geographic location. As for its cause, I
argued in my book The Third Chimpanzee for the perfection of the voice
box and hence for the anatomical basis of modern language, on which
the exercise of human creativity is so dependent. Others have
suggested instead that a change in brain organization around that
time, without a change in brain size, made modern language possible.
As for the site of the Great Leap Forward, did it take place
primarily in one geographic area, in one group of humans, who were
thereby enabled to expand and replace the former human populations of
other parts of the world? Or did it occur in parallel in different
regions, in each of which the human populations living there today
would be descendants of the populations living there before the leap?
The rather modern-looking human skulls from Africa around 100,000
years ago have been taken to support the former view, with the leap
occurring specifically in Africa. Molecular studies (of so-called
mitochondrial DNA) were initially also interpreted in terms of an
African origin of modern humans, though the meaning of those molecular
findings is currently in doubt. On the other hand, skulls of humans
living in China and Indonesia hundreds of thousands of years ago are
considered by some physical anthropologists to exhibit features still
found in modern Chinese and in Aboriginal Australians,
respectively. If true, that finding would suggest parallel evolution
and multiregional origins of modern humans, rather than origins in a
single Garden of Eden. The issue remains unresolved.
The evidence for a localized origin of modern humans, followed by
their spread and then their replacement of other types of humans
elsewhere, seems strongest for Europe. Some 40,000 years ago, into
Europe came the Cro-Magnons, with their modern skeletons, superior
weapons, and other advanced cultural traits. Within a few thousand
years there were no more Neanderthals, who had been evolving as the
sole occupants of Europe for hundreds of thousands of years. That
sequence strongly suggests that the modern Cro-Magnons somehow used
their far superior technology, and their language skills or brains, to
infect, kill, or displace the Neanderthals, leaving behind little or
no evidence of hybridization between Neanderthals and Cro-Magnons.
The great leap Forward coincides with the first proven major
extension of human geographic range since our ancestors' colonization
of Eurasia. That extension consisted of the occupation of Australia
and New Guinea, joined at that time into a single continent. Many
radiocarbondated sites attest to human presence in Australia/New
Guinea between 40,000 and 30,000 years ago (plus the inevitable
somewhat older claims of contested validity). Within a short time of
that initial peopling, humans had expanded over the whole continent
and adapted to its diverse habitats, from the tropical rain forests
and high mountains of New Guinea to the dry interior and wet
southeastern corner of Australia.
During the Ice Ages, so much of the oceans' water was locked up in
glaciers that worldwide sea levels dropped hundreds of feet below
their present stand. As a result, what are now the shallow seas
between Asia and the Indonesian islands of Sumatra, Borneo, Java, and
Bali became dry land. (So did other shallow straits, such as the
Bering Strait and the English Channel.) The edge of the Southeast
Asian mainland then lay 700 miles east of its present location.
Nevertheless, central Indonesian islands between Bali and Australia
remained surrounded and separated by deepwater channels. To reach
Australia/New Guinea from the Asian mainland at that time still
required crossing a minimum of eight channels, the broadest of which
was at least 50 miles wide. Most of those channels divided islands
visible from each other, but Australia itself was always invisible
from even the nearest Indonesian islands, Timor and Tanimbar. Thus,
the occupation of Australia/New Guinea is momentous in that it
demanded watercraft and provides by far the earliest evidence of their
use in history. Not until about 30,000 years later (13,000 years ago)
is there strong evidence of watercraft anywhere else in the world,
from the Mediterranean.
Initially, archaeologists considered the possibility that the
colonization of Australia/New Guinea was achieved accidentally by just
a few people swept to sea while fishing on a raft near an Indonesian
island. In an extreme scenario the first settlers are pictured as
having consisted of a single pregnant young woman carrying a male
fetus. But believers in the fluke-colonization theory have been
surprised by recent discoveries that still other islands, lying to the
east of New Guinea, were colonized soon after New Guinea itself, by
around 35,000 years ago. Those islands were New Britain and New
Ireland, in the Bismarck Archipelago, and Buka, in the Solomon
Archipelago. Buka lies out of sight of the closest island to the west
and could have been reached only by crossing a water gap of about 100
miles. Thus, early Australians and New Guineans were probably capable
of intentionally traveling over water to visible islands, and were
using watercraft sufficiently often that the colonization of even
invisible distant islands was repeatedly achieved unintentionally.
The settlement of Australia/New Guinea was perhaps associated with
still another big first, besides humans' first use of watercraft and
first range extension since reaching Eurasia: the first mass
extermination of large animal species by humans. Today, we regard
Africa as the continent of big mammals. Modern Eurasia also has many
species of big mammals (though not in the manifest abundance of
Africa's Serengeti Plains), such as Asia's rhinos and elephants and
tigers, and Europe's moose and bears and (until classical times)
lions. Australia/New Guinea today has no equally large mammals, in
fact no mammal larger than 100-pound kangaroos. But Australia/New
Guinea formerly had its own suite of diverse big mammals, including
giant kangaroos, rhinolike marsupials called diprotodonts and reaching
the size of a cow, and a marsupial "leopard." It also formerly had a
400-pound ostrichlike flightless bird, plus some impressively big
reptiles, including a one-ton lizard, a giant python, and
land-dwelling crocodiles.
All of those Australian/New Guinean giants (the so-called
megafauna) disappeared after the arrival of humans. While there has
been controversy about the exact timing of their demise, several
Australian archaeological sites, with dates extending over tens of
thousands of years, and with prodigiously abundant deposits of animal
bones, have been carefully excavated and found to contain not a trace
of the now extinct giants over the last 35,000 years. Hence the
megafauna probably became extinct soon after humans reached Australia.
The near-simultaneous disappearance of so many large species raises
an obvious question: what caused it? An obvious possible answer is
that they were killed off or else eliminated indirectly by the first
arriving humans. Recall that Australian/New Guinean animals had
evolved for millions of years in the absence of human hunters. We know
that Galapagos and Antarctic birds and mammals, which similarly
evolved in the absence of humans and did not see humans until modern
times, are still incurably tame today. They would have been
exterminated if conservationists had not imposed protective measures
quickly. On other recently discovered islands where protective
measures did not go into effect quickly, exterminations did indeed
result: one such victim, the dodo of Mauritius, has become virtually a
symbol for extinction. We also know now that, on every one of the
well-studied oceanic islands colonized in the prehistoric era, human
colonization led to an extinction spasm whose victims included the
moas of New Zealand, the giant lemurs of Madagascar, and the big
flightless geese of Hawaii. Just as modern humans walked up to
unafraid dodos and island seals and killed them, prehistoric humans
presumably walked up to unafraid moas and giant lemurs and killed them
too.
Hence one hypothesis for the demise of Australia's and New Guinea's
giants is that they met the same fate around 40,000 years ago. In
contrast, most big mammals of Africa and Eurasia survived into modern
times, because they had coevolved with protohumans for hundreds of
thousands or millions of years. They thereby enjoyed ample time to
evolve a fear of humans, as our ancestors' initially poor hunting
skills slowly improved. The dodo, moas, and perhaps the giants of
Australia/New Guinea had the misfortune suddenly to be confronted,
without any evolutionary preparation, by invading modern humans
possessing fully developed hunting skills.
However, the overkill hypothesis, as it is termed, has not gone
unchallenged for Australia/New Guinea. Critics emphasize that, as yet,
no one has documented the bones of an extinct Australian/New Guinean
giant with compelling evidence of its having been killed by humans, or
even of its having lived in association with humans. Defenders of the
overkill hypothesis reply: you would hardly expect to find kill sites
if the extermination was completed very quickly and long ago, such as
within a few millennia some 40,000 years ago. The critics respond with
a countertheory: perhaps the giants succumbed instead to a change in
climate, such as a severe drought on the already chronically dry
Australian continent. The debate goes on.
Personally, I can't fathom why Australia's giants should have
survived
innumerable droughts in their tens of millions of years of Australian
history,
and then have chosen to drop dead almost simultaneously (at least on a
time
scale of millions of years) precisely and just coincidentally when the
first
humans arrived. The giants became extinct not only in dry central
Australia but
also in drenching wet New Guinea and southeastern Australia.
They became extinct in every habitat without exception, from deserts
to
cold rain forest and tropical rain forest. Hence it seems to me most
likely that
the giants were indeed exterminated by humans, both directly (by being
killed
for food) and indirectly (as the result of fires and habitat
modification caused
by humans). But regardless of whether the overkill hypothesis or the
climate
hypothesis proves correct, the disappearance of all of the big animals
of
Australia/New Guinea had, as we shall see, heavy consequences for
subsequent human history. Those extinctions eliminated all the large
wild
animals that might otherwise have been candidates for domestication,
and left
native Australians and New Guineans with not a single native domestic
animal.
Thus, the colonization of Australia/New Guinea was not achieved until
around the time of the Great Leap Forward. Another extension of human
range
that soon followed was the one into the coldest parts of
Eurasia. While
Neanderthals lived in glacial times and were adapted to the cold, they
penetrated no farther north than northern Germany and Kiev. That's not
surprising, since Neanderthals apparently lacked needles, sewn
clothing, warm
houses, and other technology essential to survival in the coldest
climates.
Anatomically modern peoples who did possess such technology had
expanded into Siberia by around 20,000 years ago (there are the usual
much
older disputed claims). That expansion may have been responsible for
the
extinction of Eurasia's woolly mammoth and woolly rhinoceros.
With the settlement of Australia/New Guinea, humans now occupied
three
of the five habitable continents. (Throughout this book, I count
Eurasia as a
single continent, and I omit Antarctica because it was not reached by
humans
until the 19th century and has never had any self-supporting human
population.) That left only two continents, North America and South
America.
They were surely the last ones settled, for the obvious reason that
reaching
the Americas from the Old World required either boats (for which there
is no
evidence even in Indonesia until 40,000 years ago and none in Europe
until
much later) in order to cross by sea, or else it required the
occupation of
Siberia (unoccupied until about 20,000 years ago) in order to cross
the Bering
land bridge.
However, it is uncertain when, between about 14,000 and 35,000
years
ago, the Americas were first colonized. The oldest unquestioned human
remains in the Americas are at sites in Alaska dated around 12,000
B.C., followed
by a profusion of sites in the United States south of the Canadian
border and
in Mexico in the centuries just before 11,000 B.C. The latter sites
are called
Clovis sites, named after the type site near the town of Clovis, New
Mexico,
where their characteristic large stone spearpoints were first
recognized.
Hundreds of Clovis sites are now known, blanketing all 48 of the lower
U.S.
states south into Mexico. Unquestioned evidence of human presence
appears
soon thereafter in Amazonia and in Patagonia. These facts suggest the
interpretation that Clovis sites document the Americas' first
colonization by
people, who quickly multiplied, expanded, and filled the two
continents.
One might at first be surprised that Clovis descendants could reach
Patagonia, lying 8,000 miles south of the U.S.-Canada border, in less
than a
thousand years. However, that translates into an average expansion of
only 8
miles per year, a trivial feat for a hunter-gatherer likely to cover
that distance
even within a single day's normal foraging.
One might also at first be surprised that the Americas evidently
filled up
with humans so quickly that people were motivated to keep spreading
south
toward Patagonia. That population growth also proves unsurprising when
one
stops to consider the actual numbers. If the Americas eventually came
to hold
hunter-gatherers at an average population density of somewhat under
one
person per square mile (a high value for modern hunter-gatherers),
then the
whole area of the Americas would eventually have held about 10 million
hunter-gatherers. But even if the initial colonists had consisted of
only 100
people and their numbers had increased at a rate of only 1.1 percent
per year,
the colonists' descendants would have reached that population ceiling
of 10
million people within a thousand years. A population growth rate of
1.1
percent per year is again trivial: rates as high as 3.4 percent per
year have been
observed in modern times when people colonized virgin lands, such as
when
the HMS Bounty mutineers and their Tahitian wives colonized Pitcairn
Island.
The profusion of Clovis hunters' sites within the first few
centuries after
their arrival resembles the site profusion documented archaeologically
for the
more recent discovery of New Zealand by ancestral Maori. A profusion
of
early sites is also documented for the much older colonization of
Europe by
anatomically modern humans, and for the occupation of Australia/New
Guinea. That is, everything about the Clovis phenomenon and its
spread through the Americas corresponds to findings for other,
unquestioned
virgin-land colonizations in history.
What might be the significance of Clovis sites' bursting forth in
the
centuries just before 11,000 B.C., rather than in those before 16,000
or 21,000
B.C.? Recall that Siberia has always been cold, and that a continuous
ice sheet
stretched as an impassable barrier across the whole width of Canada
during
much of the Pleistocene Ice Ages. We have already seen that the
technology
required for coping with extreme cold did not emerge until after
anatomically
modern humans invaded Europe around 40,000 years ago, and that people
did
not colonize Siberia until 20,000 years later. Eventually, those early
Siberians
crossed to Alaska, either by sea across the Bering Strait (only 50
miles wide
even today) or else on foot at glacial times when Bering Strait was
dry land.
The Bering land bridge, during its millennia of intermittent
existence, would
have been up to a thousand miles wide, covered by open tundra, and
easily
traversable by people adapted to cold conditions. The land bridge was
flooded
and became a strait again most recently when sea level rose after
around 14,000
B.C. Whether those early Siberians walked or paddled to Alaska, the
earliest
secure evidence of human presence in Alaska dates from around 12,000
B.C.
Soon thereafter, a north-south ice-free corridor opened in the
Canadian ice
sheet, permitting the first Alaskans to pass through and come out into
the
Great Plains around the site of the modern Canadian city of
Edmonton. That
removed the last serious barrier between Alaska and Patagonia for
modern
humans. The Edmonton pioneers would have found the Great Plains
teeming
with game. They would have thrived, increased in numbers, and
gradually
spread south to occupy the whole hemisphere.
One other feature of the Clovis phenomenon fits our expectations
for the
first human presence south of the Canadian ice sheet. Like
Australia/New
Guinea, the Americas had originally been full of big mammals. About
15,000
years ago, the American West looked much as Africa's Serengeti Plains
do
today, with herds of elephants and horses pursued by lions and
cheetahs, and
joined by members of such exotic species as camels and giant ground
sloths.
Just as in Australia/New Guinea, in the Americas most of those large
mammals became extinct. Whereas the extinctions took place probably
before
30,000 years ago in Australia, they occurred around 17,000 to 12,000
years
ago in the Americas. For those extinct American
mammals whose bones are available in greatest abundance and have been
dated especially accurately, one can pinpoint the extinctions as
having
occurred around 11,000 B.C. Perhaps the two most accurately dated
extinctions
are those of the Shasta ground sloth and Harrington's mountain goat in
the
Grand Canyon area; both of those populations disappeared within a
century or
two of 11,100 B.C. Whether coincidentally or not, that date is
identical, within
experimental error, to the date of Clovis hunters' arrival in the
Grand Canyon
area.
The discovery of numerous skeletons of mammoths with Clovis
spearpoints
between their ribs suggests that this agreement of dates is not a
coincidence.
Hunters expanding southward through the Americas, encountering big
animals
that had never seen humans before, may have found those American
animals
easy to kill and may have exterminated them. A countertheory is that
America's
big mammals instead became extinct because of climate changes at the
end of
the last Ice Age, which (to confuse the interpretation for modern
paleontologists) also happened around 11,000 B.C.
Personally, I have the same problem with a climatic theory of
megafaunal
extinction in the Americas as with such a theory in Australia/New
Guinea. The
Americas' big animals had already survived the ends of 22 previous Ice
Ages.
Why did most of them pick the 23rd to expire in concert, in the
presence of all
those supposedly harmless humans? Why did they disappear in all
habitats,
not only in habitats that contracted but also in ones that greatly
expanded at
the end of the last Ice Age? Hence I suspect that Clovis hunters did
it, but the
debate remains unresolved. Whichever theory proves correct, most large
wild
mammal species that might otherwise have later been domesticated by
Native
Americans were thereby removed.
Also unresolved is the question whether Clovis hunters really were
the first
Americans. As always happens whenever anyone claims the first
anything,
claims of discoveries of pre-Clovis human sites in the Americas are
constantly
being advanced. Every year, a few of those new claims really do appear
convincing and exciting when initially announced. Then the inevitable
problems of interpretation arise. Were the reported tools at the site
really tools
made by humans, or just natural rock shapes? Are the reported
radiocarbon
dates really correct, and not invalidated by any of the numerous
difficulties
that can plague radiocarbon dating? If the dates are correct, are they
really
associated with human products, rather than
just being a 15,000-year-old lump of charcoal lying next to a stone
tool actually
made 9,000 years ago?
To illustrate these problems, consider the following typical
example of an
often quoted pre-Clovis claim. At a Brazilian rock shelter named Pedro
Furada,
archaeologists found cave paintings undoubtedly made by humans. They
also
discovered, among the piles of stones at the base of a cliff, some
stones
whose shapes suggested the possibility of their being crude tools. In
addition,
they came upon supposed hearths, whose burnt charcoal yielded
radiocarbon
dates of around 35,000 years ago. Articles on Pedro Furada were
accepted for
publication in the prestigious and highly selective international
scientific
journal Nature.
But none of those rocks at the base of the cliff is an obviously
human-made
tool, as are Clovis points and Cro-Magnon tools. If hundreds of
thousands of
rocks fall from a high cliff over the course of tens of thousands of
years, many
of them will become chipped and broken when they hit the rocks below,
and
some will come to resemble crude tools chipped and broken by
humans. In
western Europe and elsewhere in Amazonia, archaeologists have
radiocarbon-dated the actual pigments used in cave paintings, but that
was
not done at Pedro Furada. Forest fires occur frequently in the
vicinity and
produce charcoal that is regularly swept into caves by wind and
streams. No
evidence links the 35,000-year-old charcoal to the undoubted cave
paintings at
Pedro Furada. Although the original excavators remain convinced, a
team of
archaeologists who were not involved in the excavation but receptive
to
pre-Clovis claims recently visited the site and came away unconvinced.
The North American site that currently enjoys the strongest
credentials as a
possible pre-Clovis site is Meadowcroft rock shelter, in Pennsylvania,
yielding
reported human-associated radiocarbon dates of about 16,000 years
ago. At
Meadowcroft no archaeologist denies that many human artifacts do occur
in
many carefully excavated layers. But the oldest radiocarbon dates
don't make
sense, because the plant and animal species associated with them are
species
living in Pennsylvania in recent times of mild climates, rather than
species
expected for the glacial times of 16,000 years ago. Hence one has to
suspect
that the charcoal samples dated from the oldest human occupation
levels
consist of post-Clovis charcoal infiltrated with older carbon. The
strongest
pre-Clovis candidate in South America is the Monte Verde site, in
southern
Chile, dated to at least
15,000 years ago. It too now seems convincing to many archaeologists,
but
caution is warranted in view of all the previous disillusionments.
If there really were pre-Clovis people in the Americas, why is it
still so hard
to prove that they existed? Archaeologists have excavated hundreds of
American sites unequivocally dating to between 2000 and 11,000 B.C.,
including
dozens of Clovis sites in the North American West, rock shelters in
the
Appalachians, and sites in coastal California. Below all the
archaeological
layers with undoubted human presence, at many of those same sites,
deeper
older layers have been excavated and still yield undoubted remains of
animalsbut with no further evidence of humans. The weaknesses in
pre-Clovis evidence in the Americas contrast with the strength of the
evidence
in Europe, where hundreds of sites attest to the presence of modern
humans
long before Clovis hunters appeared in the Americas around 11,000
B.C. Even
more striking is the evidence from Australia/New Guinea, where there
are
barely one-tenth as many archaeologists as in the United States alone,
but
where those few archaeologists have nevertheless discovered over a
hundred
unequivocal pre-Clovis sites scattered over the whole continent.
Early humans certainly didn't fly by helicopter from Alaska to
Meadowcroft
and Monte Verde, skipping all the landscape in between. Advocates of
pre-Clovis settlement suggest that, for thousands or even tens of
thousands of
years, pre-Clovis humans remained at low population densities or
poorly
visible archaeologically, for unknown reasons unprecedented elsewhere
in the
world. I find that suggestion infinitely more implausible than the
suggestion
that Monte Verde and Meadowcroft will eventually be reinterpreted, as
have
other claimed pre-Clovis sites. My feeling is that, if there really
had been
pre-Clovis settlement in the Americas, it would have become obvious at
many
locations by now, and we would not still be arguing. However,
archaeologists
remain divided on these questions.
The consequences for our understanding of later American prehistory
remain the same, whichever interpretation proves correct. Either: the
Americas
were first settled around 11,000 B.C. and quickly filled up with
people. Or else:
the first settlement occurred somewhat earlier (most advocates of
pre-Clovis
settlement would suggest by 15,000 or 20,000 years ago, possibly
30,000 years
ago, and few would seriously claim earlier); but those pre-Clovis
settlers
remained few in numbers, or inconspicuous, or had little impact, until
around
11,000 B.C. In either case, of the five
habitable continents, North America and South America are the ones
with the
shortest human prehistories.
With the occupation of the Americas, most habitable areas of the
continents and continental islands, plus oceanic islands from
Indonesia to
east of New Guinea, supported humans. The settlement of the world's
remaining islands was not completed until modern times: Mediterranean
islands such as Crete, Cyprus, Corsica, and Sardinia between about
8500 and
4000 B.C.; Caribbean islands beginning around 4000 B.C.; Polynesian
and Micronesian islands between 1200 B.C. and A.D. 1000; Madagascar
sometime between A.D. 300 and 800; and Iceland in the ninth century
A.D. Native Americans, possibly ancestral to the modern Inuit, spread
throughout the High Arctic around 2000 B.C. That left, as the sole
uninhabited areas awaiting European explorers over the last 700 years,
only the
most remote islands of the Atlantic and Indian Oceans (such as the
Azores and
Seychelles), plus Antarctica.
What significance, if any, do the continents' differing dates of
settlement
have for subsequent history? Suppose that a time machine could have
transported an archaeologist back in time, for a world tour at around
11,000 B.C. Given the state of the world then, could the archaeologist
have
predicted the sequence in which human societies on the various
continents
would develop guns, germs, and steel, and thus predicted the state of
the
world today?
Our archaeologist might have considered the possible advantages of
a
head start. If that counted for anything, then Africa enjoyed an
enormous
advantage: at least 5 million more years of separate protohuman
existence than
on any other continent. In addition, if it is true that modern humans
arose in
Africa around 100,000 years ago and spread to other continents, that
would
have wiped out any advantages accumulated elsewhere in the meantime
and
given Africans a new head start. Furthermore, human genetic diversity
is
highest in Africa; perhaps more-diverse humans would collectively
produce
more-diverse inventions.
But our archaeologist might then reflect: what, really, does a
"head start"
mean for the purposes of this book? We cannot take the metaphor of a
footrace literally. If by head start you mean the time required to
populate a
continent after the arrival of the first few pioneering colonists,
that time is
relatively brief: for example, less than 1,000 years to fill up even
the whole New World. If by head start you instead mean the time
required to
adapt to local conditions, I grant that some extreme environments did
take time:
for instance, 9,000 years to occupy the High Arctic after the
occupation of the
rest of North America. But people would have explored and adapted to
most
other areas quickly, once modern human inventiveness had
developed. For
example, after the ancestors of the Maori reached New Zealand, it
apparently
took them barely a century to discover all worthwhile stone sources;
only a
few more centuries to kill every last moa in some of the world's most
rugged
terrain; and only a few centuries to differentiate into a range of
diverse
societies, from that of coastal hunter-gatherers to that of farmers
practicing
new types of food storage.
Our archaeologist might therefore look at the Americas and conclude
that
Africans, despite their apparently enormous head start, would have
been
overtaken by the earliest Americans within at most a
millennium. Thereafter,
the Americas' greater area (50 percent greater than Africa's) and much
greater
environmental diversity would have given the advantage to Native
Americans
over Africans.
The archaeologist might then turn to Eurasia and reason as
follows. Eurasia
is the world's largest continent. It has been occupied for longer than
any other
continent except Africa. Africa's long occupation before the
colonization of
Eurasia a million years ago might have counted for nothing anyway,
because
protohumans were at such a primitive stage then. Our archaeologist
might look
at the Upper Paleolithic flowering of southwestern Europe between
20,000 and
12,000 years ago, with all those famous artworks and complex tools,
and
wonder whether Eurasia was already getting a head start then, at least
locally.
Finally, the archaeologist would turn to Australia/New Guinea,
noting first
its small area (it's the smallest continent), the large fraction of it
covered by
desert capable of supporting few humans, the continent's isolation,
and its
later occupation than that of Africa and Eurasia. All that might lead
the
archaeologist to predict slow development in Australia/New Guinea.
But remember that Australians and New Guineans had by far the
earliest
watercraft in the world. They were creating cave paintings apparently
at least
as early as the Cro-Magnons in Europe. Jonathan Kingdon and Tim
Flannery
have noted that the colonization of Australia/New Guinea from the
islands of
the Asian continental shelf required humans to learn to deal with the
new
environments they encountered on the islands of central
Indonesiaa maze of coastlines offering the richest marine resources,
coral
reefs, and mangroves in the world. As the colonists crossed the
straits
separating each Indonesian island from the next one to the east, they
adapted
anew, filled up that next island, and went on to colonize the next
island again. It
was a hitherto unprecedented golden age of successive human population
explosions. Perhaps those cycles of colonization, adaptation, and
population
explosion were what selected for the Great Leap Forward, which then
diffused
back westward to Eurasia and Africa. If this scenario is correct, then
Australia/New Guinea gained a massive head start that might have
continued
to propel human development there long after the Great Leap Forward.
Thus, an observer transported back in time to 11,000 B.C. could not
have
predicted on which continent human societies would develop most
quickly,
but could have made a strong case for any of the continents. With
hindsight,
of course, we know that Eurasia was the one. But it turns out that the
actual
reasons behind the more rapid development of Eurasian societies were
not at
all the straightforward ones that our imaginary archaeologist of
11,000 B.C.
guessed. The remainder of this book consists of a quest to discover
those real
reasons.
Footnote:
Throughout this book, dates for about the last 15,000 years will be
quoted as
so-called calibrated radiocarbon dates, rather than as conventional,
uncalibrated
radiocarbon dates. The difference between the two types of dates will
be explained in
Chapter 5. Calibrated dates are the ones believed to correspond more
closely to actual calendar dates. Readers accustomed to uncalibrated
dates will need to bear this
distinction in mind whenever they find me quoting apparently erroneous
dates that are
older than the ones with which they are familiar. For example, the
date of the Clovis
archaeological horizon in North America is usually quoted as around
9000 B.C. (11,000
years ago), but I quote it instead as around 11,000 B.C. (13,000 years
ago), because the date usually quoted is uncalibrated.
From Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies, by Jared Diamond. © 1997 Jared Diamond.
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