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Investigating India

24 June 2024 at 00:10
Armchair travel India's ecology and climate change with Sam Matey in a wonderful heavily photographed ten-part travel report that deep dives into India's wildlife, people working in the field and efforts to ameliorate the challenges. The last piece, the hottest day in Delhi's History is an excellent introduction to Matey's framing of the environmental catastrophes we face - recognizing the scale, finding the stories and most of all, pointing out the helpers.

We now have even more evidence against the β€œecocide” theory of Easter Island

21 June 2024 at 14:00
statues on easter island arranged in a horizontal row

Enlarge / New research lends further credence to the "population crash" theory about Easter Island being just a myth. (credit: Arian Zwegers/CC BY 2.0)

For centuries, Western scholars have touted the fate of the native population on Easter Island (Rapa Nui) as a case study in the devastating cost of environmentally unsustainable living. The story goes that the people on the remote island chopped down all the trees to build massive stone statues, triggering a population collapse. Their numbers were further depleted when Europeans discovered the island and brought foreign diseases, among other factors. But an alternative narrative began to emerge in the 21st century that the earliest inhabitants actually lived quite sustainably until that point. A new paper published in the journal Science Advances offers another key piece of evidence in support of that alternative hypothesis.

As previously reported, Easter Island is famous for its giant monumental statues, called moai, built some 800 years ago and typically mounted on platforms called ahu. Scholars have puzzled over the moai on Easter Island for decades, pondering their cultural significance, as well as how a Stone Age culture managed to carve and transport statues weighing as much as 92 tons. The first Europeans arrived in the 17th century and found only a few thousand inhabitants on a tiny island (just 14 by 7 miles across) thousands of miles away from any other land. Since then, in order to explain the presence of so manyΒ moai, the assumption has been that the island was once home to tens of thousands of people.

But perhaps they didn't need tens of thousands of people to accomplish that feat. Back in 2012, Carl Lipo of Binghamton University and Terry Hunt of the University of Arizona showed that you could transport a 10-foot, 5-ton moai a few hundred yards with just 18 people and three strong ropes by employing a rocking motion. [UPDATE: An eagle-eyed reader alerted us to the 1980s work of Czech experimental archaeologist Pavel Pavel, who conducted similar practical experiments on Easter Island after being inspired by Thor Heyerdahl's Kon Tiki. Pavel concluded that just 16 men and one leader were sufficient to transport the statues.]

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Finding a small forest long-since built over

By: unearthed
9 June 2024 at 15:16
A local twitter friend who is a geologist, archaeologist and historian has uncovered the history of a former isolated native forest that is now a town. It's quite a tale from an accidental find of an 1847 map with a coloured patch representing a forest, to a 3D virtual forest in Blender matched to an 1859 watercolour painting.

The forest appears to be have been an isolated patch of about 2.2 Hectares in a sea of tussock grass - mostly various related species of this tussock Chionochloa. The trees were most probably kahikatea, a podocarp (seed with a foot) that were viewed as nearly useless by European settlers until "until it was discovered that it did not taint food" , thus much of Aotearoa New Zealand's magnificent forests became packaging. Outside of a fifth of the land surface that is National Park, healthy native forest is increasingly rare, occurring as patches of a few kilometres to a few hundred square metres - staggering on as remnants. Here's WUX (facebook video) speaking from within another podocarp remnant, this time totora in the Wairarapa in the North Island. WUX makes a lot of content on NZ native forests, Māori culture and history ... and Māori food as he's a chef with a food truck in Masterton.
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