I’ve long been interested in the megafauna extinctions of
Pleistocene North America. A number of
books endorse Paul Martin’s “Pleistocene Overkill Hypothesis,” which asserts
that the early humans on the continent were “super predators” who launched a
blitzkrieg of overhunting. Hunting began
in northwest Canada, and spread south and east like a wild fire. Within 2,000 years, at least 33 genera (50
species) of large mammals went extinct — many more than in the preceding three
million years. At first contact, large
animals who had never before seen odd-looking humans, did not sense danger.
In other locations, when humans first arrived, extinctions
followed — for example, Australia, New Zealand, Madagascar, and Caribbean islands. Hunting, and hunting alone, was the cause,
said Martin. His ideas really pissed off
Native Americans, like Vine Deloria, because overkill implied that Indians were
as foolish as Euro Americans.
Deloria blasted
the hypothesis, pointing to the fantastic number of bones found in northern
Siberia — mammoths, mastodons, rhinos, horses, bison. Chinese have been hauling away mammoth tusks
since medieval times, and this ivory is still being
mined today; a high-quality tusk can fetch over $40,000. The white keys on grandma’s piano might be
mammoth ivory.
These bones were not the result of a blitzkrieg. Mastodons had been living in Siberia for
400,000 years, and woolly mammoths for 250,000 years. The frigid climate helped to preserve their
remains. In central Russia, more than 70
mammoth
bone huts have been found. One hut
had 385 bones, and weighed 20 tons.
I just read The
Call of Distant Mammoths by paleontologist Peter Ward, and learned
a lot about extinction and evolution. I’ve
often wondered how hairy lads, on foot, with wooden spears, were able to
exterminate every horse in all of North America within 2,000 years. Bison were also residents of the open plains,
able to sprint up to 35 miles per hour, and they did not go extinct — and
horses could run even faster.
Ward introduces us to the climate change hypothesis. During the two million year Ice Age (the
Pleistocene), there were at least 18 glaciation cycles. Until the last cycle, the megafauna had mostly
survived. The last one began 18,000
years ago, and it was the most intense of all.
It ended 12,000 years ago. The
ice pack melted, forest advanced, and habitats rapidly changed. The mammoth tundra fragmented and shrank,
which split the herbivore population into isolated groups.
Ward also studied the extinction of dinosaurs. They roamed the Earth for 160 million years,
and then disappeared. Ward was an early
advocate of the notion that the dinosaur mass extinction was sudden, caused by
an asteroid
strike near Chicxulub, Mexico. Some
say it resulted in a decade of near-freezing temperatures on a planet that was
largely tropical.
Throughout the dinosaur era, small mammals also existed — insect
eating night creatures. The extinction
of dinosaurs eliminated large animals, and made the age of mammals
possible. If not for the asteroid, humans
and elephants would have never evolved.
Mammoth country once ranged from France to Siberia to New York.
Our primate ancestors evolved in the trees. Their tropical homeland was eventually chilled
by an era of glaciation. It thinned the
rainforest, and expanded savannahs, which encouraged the evolution of large
mammals, including our hominid ancestors.
Thus, you and I are the children of climate change and asteroids.
Evolution is a process that creates and deletes species. New species can only emerge when a group
becomes isolated, evolves unique traits, and eventually becomes unable to interbreed
with their old kin. Homo sapiens come
in many sizes, shapes, and colors, but all belong to the same species, because we
can all interbreed. Ward expects white
skinned people to disappear in a few thousand years, because of their
increasing vulnerability to skin cancer.
Our cultural myths tell us that humans are continuously
getting smarter. Ward believes that the
brains of modern humans are essentially the same as the first Homo sapiens in
Africa, 125,000 to 200,000 years ago (but we’ve learned lots of stuff since
then). Once a new species emerges, it
changes little thereafter. Humans are
the last species of the hominids, and this has risks. A gene pool has better odds for long-term
survival when it diversifies into multiple species, as the ants have.
Another way for critters to avoid extinction is to become
generalists, like humans, rats, and cockroaches, who have adapted to many
different ecosystems around the world. Today,
humans live everywhere. There is no
place a group could remain isolated for millennia. So, there is little chance for a new hominid
species to emerge.
Evolution is random, like tossing dice. The process is influenced by ongoing
environmental change, natural selection, and genetic drift (chance genetic
changes). Evolution has no foresight; it
can’t anticipate coming changes. It’s
not always progressive. Greenland ice
core data tells us that there have been times when global temperature changed
up to 18°F in a few decades. Many gene
pools that work well in one set of conditions will fail to adapt to sudden
shifts.
The golden rule of evolution is adapt or die. Ward doesn’t discuss cultural evolution,
which is a million times faster than genetic evolution, and has catapulted
humankind onto extremely thin ice, by overloading our tropical primate brains
with way too many half-smart ideas. We
are, by far, the world champion resource parasites. We are hurling countless species into the
abyss in our insane impossible quest for perpetual economic growth.
In an extremely quirky twist, Ward celebrates human supremacy
at causing mass extinction. “We are the
comet now. And not only have we won the
game of evolution; we control the rules of the game,” he wrote. “And to this winner, in my view, goes an even
greater prize: species immortality. It
is my opinion that no matter where on the board we humans land and no matter
what card we draw, we cannot be knocked into extinction.” Who could disagree?
The book was written 20 years ago, when resource limits and
climate change were still dumb ideas among the lunatic fringe — rational people. Ward is employed in academia, which remains a
militant hotbed of radicalized human supremacists.
OK, back to the megafauna.
Doubts are growing about the overkill hypothesis. Martin claimed a sudden 2,000-year rampage
wiped out the megafauna, but this was based on data generated by obsolete
dating technology. Improved dating does
not confirm sudden extinction. Martin
claimed the extinctions fanned out in a wave, beginning in Alberta — so kill
sites far from there should be more recent.
They aren’t. We have only
discovered a dozen sites where human artifacts are found with mammoth remains.
Dan Fisher has studied of mammoth tusks in Michigan and
Ohio. Tusks have annual rings inside,
like tree trunks. Rings are thin in
hungry years. In female tusks, rings
mark each pregnancy, providing a birth rate.
If climate change had killed the mammoths, the rings would indicate
malnutrition, but Fisher found that the last mammoths were “fat, fit, and well
fed.”
Ward suspects that the mammoths were the victims of hunting. Unlike bunnies, mammoths
were slow to mature, and had low reproduction rates. If hunters had regularly taken just two
percent of the animals each year, the extinction process would have taken 400
years — too slow for each generation of hunters to notice. Hunting alone could have wiped them out. Ward thinks that if there had been no
hunting, mammoths would probably have survived the warming climate.
In the 1990s, editors adamantly insisted that manuscripts
like Ward’s include brilliant solutions and happy endings, because bummer books
didn’t sell. So, his mammoth book ends
with a happy visit to the year 3001. Population
was well below its peak of 11 billion. The
U.S. grain belt was a desert. African survivors
were healthy vegetarians with solar panels and pedal-powered transport. The rainforest was long gone, replaced with
endless fields of GMO crops. Wildlife
and livestock had been eliminated by starving hordes. Happily, the human species survived — hooray!
Compulsory happy endings meant that vital knowledge was
deliberately withheld from an entire generation, who are now teachers,
reporters, and leaders. Even today, a
“don’t frighten the children” strategy remains common among educators, and young
minds are still being infected with a carcinogenic worldview. Bummer!
Ward, Peter D., The
Call of Distant Mammoths, Copernicus, New York, 1997.
6 comments:
Are humans too smart to become extinct? There is no evidence supporting such a fairy tale. Yet, most are promoting this delusion, another stab at species immortality, making it all the more likely we will go extinct in relatively short order. Party on! No one is responsible for whatever happens.
Ward's book sounds interesting. It's a shame that Martin's amazing life work get's reduced down to the one or two ideas like the blitzkreig. He was an interesting character, researcher and thinker. I loved his book Twilight of the Mammoths and others. One of the things I took from that book was that climate change by Martin's take improved habitat conditions for many or most of the megafauna like the proboscids.
Here in Eugene there is a strong bolete impact hypothesis group led by Jon Erlandson, the head of the cultural and natural history museum, and one of my favorite anthropology profs at the UO 20 years back. One of his mentors at Santa Barbara is the leading geologist proponent of that hypothesis, which eclipsed the overkill hypothesis for a while, but now seems to be declining.
I wouldn't be surprised if hunting, climate, and the younger dryas event (whether bolete caused or by ice melt ocean currents) all played parts in many of the megafauna species extinctions. But we have a few pygmy mammoth species that survived long after in Siberian islands and possible the channel islands. And many species seemed to live several thousand years after the younger dryas. And now we know that there were people living with proboscids and other megafauna for 5k or more years before they went extinct, so it's a challenging question we'll never fully know the answer too, since it's not knowable.
It's clear enough to me that humans had a strong role in megafauna extinction. I personally feel a responsibility to try and restore some of limbs of the tree of life that we lopped off, and some branches like proboscids are worth considering restoring. The megafauna restoration movement has been experimenting with restoring the Indian elephant, which is closest to extinct N American probiscids to Texas and other areas. Cheetah, lion, camel, and horse are easier possibilities. The horse is already here and surviving on its own, all we'd have to do is let go of a little bit of the dogmatic parts of the religion of nativism (restoring ecosystems to 1850s) and stop rounding up wild horses and killing them. Giant sloths would be a lot harder.
If we grant a responsibility to restore megafauna, it brings up fun dilemmas, such as what science would be ok to use, if we could clone from amber dna from permafrost, should we do it? Gene splicing for restoration?
I think it's helpful for understanding N American prehistory. At least for my home area of western Oregon, prehistory seems to move from general toolkits and general adaptations from roughly 15k to 9k that may have killed off the megafauna, radically altering plant and animal systems, then local adaptations for 9k years, where more than 400 generations coexisted with grizzly and wolf and left nature in as good or better shape than they found it, a rare thing among humans. Although if we bother to study climate history, it appears that the climate was warmest from 7-10k during this interglaciation, and by 4-5k was cooling towards another 100k glaciation (until recent anthropogenic warming), and the prairie savanna systems of the valley would have been replaced by the imperialistic Douglas-fir if the Kalapuya didn't fight nature by burning annually. Cheers, Erik
Hi Thom! Yeah, I think that Ward is sniffing some glue when he imagines the human species surviving for eternity. Life on Earth is an ongoing drama, with actors moving onto the stage as others move off. The picture looks very different when viewed from a 500 million year perspective. We’re here today. Enjoy!
Are humans too smart? We’re very clever, but we’re way over our heads. We are never capable of foreseeing the unintended consequences of our techno-bumbling. A couple years ago, Craig Dilworth spent four days camping in my living room. His meme is the Vicious Circle Principle. He wrote Too Smart For Our Own Good — The Ecological Predicament of Humankind.
Hi Erik! Greetings from Eugene! I agree that hunting certainly played a significant role in the extinctions. Martin took that notion to the extreme, but his hypothesis was based on minimal compelling evidence — with regard to North America. Paleontology seems to be about 98% theory and 2% evidence. We have found a few hundred pieces to a billion piece puzzle.
<< One of his mentors at Santa Barbara is the leading geologist proponent of that hypothesis, which eclipsed the overkill hypothesis for a while, but now seems to be declining. >>
This is about the Pleistocene extinctions?
It would be nice to restore the missing megafauna relatives. I don’t think that there would be much support for reintroducing powerful carnivores… or elephants. “They trampled my garden!!!” We have been educated to be self-centered ecological pinheads.
Ward gave me a few puzzle pieces I was missing, but he didn’t have a lot to say about most other megafauna extinctions.
<< … more than 400 generations coexisted with grizzly and wolf and left nature in as good or better shape than they found it, a rare thing among humans. >>
Interesting. They found tundra, and left it with boreal forest.
All the best, Rick
Hi Rick,
You're right about paleontology, but what a fun science. The fossil record is amazing and beautiful, and leads to deeper religious feeling and truth than any religion in my book, if religion is thought of as reverence, or connection to the primary. It shows our deep connection with everything.
Yes, the bolete hypothesis is thought by many to be the cause of pleistocene extinctions. See wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Younger_Dryas_impact_hypothesis.
There's lot's of support for restoring the wolf and grizzly and they are recovering in many places, so why not the cheetah in the parts of the pronghorn range where there would be least fighting about it? They are why the pronghorn are so fast; they belong here.
For the 400 generations, I was referring to the Willamette Valley for the folks of Penutian/Kalapuyan derivation, which we think had a continuous culture here for 9k years. They didn't find tundra and leave boreal forest. They found oak savanna and prairie and left oak savanna and prairie. We think the prairie grasslands developed with minimal or no human impact sometime from 7-10k ago during the peak of the Holocene warming, when it was much warmer than now.
Best,
erik
Hi Erik!
I like rock hunting too. I spent nine years in Upper Michigan’s copper country. Paleontology sounds challenging — lots of cat fights and hair pulling. That would get tiring for non-egomaniacs. But yes, the perception of deep time puts reality in a very different perspective than a 20th century perspective.
Ah! Yes, I remember reading about the bolete hypothesis. So, do you have an opinion on why bison, pronghorns, elk, and moose made it, and horses and other megafauna did not?
<< There's lot's of support for restoring the wolf and grizzly >>
OK! No elephants. What about horse predators? I reviewed George Monbiot’s book, Feral, about rewilding in Europe.
<< For the 400 generations, I was referring to the Willamette Valley >>
OK.
The library is about to close. The Eugene library has Ward’s mammoth book.
Rick
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