A NEW study has vindicated Aboriginal people over the extinction of Australia's megafauna, finding wild climate fluctuations killed off most of the giant species well before humans arrived.
The idea that early Aborigines wiped out the megafauna – which included a ferocious marsupial lion, a hippopotamus-sized wombat, a five-metre goanna and a 230 kilogram kangaroo – was popularised in palaeontologist Tim Flannery’s 1994 book Future Eaters.
But a scientific review has found fewer than 15 of the 90-odd giant species in Australia and New Guinea still existed by the time people arrived.
“There’s no uncontested archaeological evidence that a single human ever ate a single individual from a single megafaunal species,” said lead author Stephen Wroe of the universities of NSW and Newcastle.
“Not only is there no clear evidence of that, there’s no uncontested evidence anywhere of humans and megafauna even being in the same place at the same time.”
Proponents of the “blitzkrieg theory” – that the Aborigines killed off the megafauna soon after they arrived – say the lack of authenticated “kill sites” doesn’t disprove the theory, because such sites would be very few and hard to find.
But Professor Wroe said new dating evidence suggested as few as eight megafauna species coexisted with humans. And Antarctic ice core records showed that glacial cycles had become increasingly severe over at least the past 350,000 years, draining Australia of water and slashing average temperatures by 9 degrees Celsius.
“It’s very clear that there was a long-term loss of species through the last 150,000 to 300,000 years. When humans arrived, things were already going from bad to worse,” Professor Wroe said.
He said very low population estimates for early Aborigines, and evidence that they were fisherman rather than big-game hunters, suggested they would not have had the means to “wipe out 90 species in the blink of an eye”.
And charcoal evidence indicated that an upsurge in the frequency of fires, sometimes attributed to “firestick farming” by Aborigines, had preceded their arrival by many thousands of years.
Professor Wroe said there was no doubt that Maoris had driven New Zealand’s giant moa bird to extinction, and some evidence that North American settlers had done the same to mammoths. But it was fanciful to assume something similar had happened much earlier in Australia.
“Perhaps at some point it was reasonable to invoke humans as a driving force. But why would you, given that there is no direct evidence whatsoever?”
The study, which also involved researchers from the universities of Queensland, New England and Washington, is published today in the US journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
walkinTas wrote:In the Australian today, a new study on the extinction of megafauna suggests it was all due to climate change.
FatCanyoner wrote: a ferocious marsupial lion, a hippopotamus-sized wombat, a five-metre goanna and a 230 kilogram kangaroo
Swifty wrote:Jared Diamond has noted that the extinction of megafauna globally has occurred soon after humans arrived on the scene - in Australia, Asia, North and South America, and particularly in New Zealand.
Also, these fauna had lived through multiple glacial cycles over the previous hundreds of thousands of years. Why the sudden extinction just after people showed up? Because the people killed and ate them.
Yep, that about sums it up.doogs wrote:This page sums it up pretty well...
Happy Pirate wrote:Ac
The truth I suspect is more along the lines of 'hey - we're all human - we stuff things up to fill our own needs because we can and because we tend to look only at short term changes.'
Happy Pirate wrote:It seems to me as if some people want to preserve the cliche of the "noble savage" who lives in perfect harmony with the environment. Its a very 19th century Romantic European construct.
Happy Pirate wrote:Actually it wasn't a new study; merely another rehash of old papers. It added nothing new to the debate.
This is one of those issues which are almost impossible to "prove" by scientific evidence and are fraught with opinion, agendas and even the dreaded PC.
Personally I think its worth noting that, as Diamond was mentioned, megafauna has gone extinct coincidentally with the arrival of human populations at many periods and locations across the globe.
walkinTas wrote:In the Australian today, a new study on the extinction of megafauna suggests it was all due to climate change.
nq111 wrote:Happy Pirate wrote:Ac
The truth I suspect is more along the lines of 'hey - we're all human - we stuff things up to fill our own needs because we can and because we tend to look only at short term changes.'
I think the same is true of every species on the planet. We are just better at it and able to generate bigger impacts.
How many species did the evolution of cyanobacteria wipe out billions of years ago? Nearly every current species at the time.
Clusterpod wrote:Happy Pirate wrote:It seems to me as if some people want to preserve the cliche of the "noble savage" who lives in perfect harmony with the environment. Its a very 19th century Romantic European construct.
A construct that is nevertheless far closer than the Hobbesian : ""In such condition there is no place for industry, because the fruit thereof is uncertain, and consequently, not culture of the earth, no navigation, nor the use of commodities that may be imported by sea, no commodious building, no instruments of moving and removing such things as require much force, no knowledge of the face of the earth, no account of time, no arts, no letters, no society, and which is worst of all, continual fear and danger of violent death, and the life of man, solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short."
I know which construct I prefer.
walkinTas wrote:On evolutionary time scales, humans arrived in Australia very recently - about half way through the "late Pleistocene".Happy Pirate wrote:Actually it wasn't a new study; merely another rehash of old papers. It added nothing new to the debate.
This is one of those issues which are almost impossible to "prove" by scientific evidence and are fraught with opinion, agendas and even the dreaded PC.
Personally I think its worth noting that, as Diamond was mentioned, megafauna has gone extinct coincidentally with the arrival of human populations at many periods and locations across the globe.
You are right in saying the opinion isn't new. And you are also right that megafauna have gone extinct coincidentally with the arrival of human populations across the globe. Still, it is worth asking if science can provide evidence to support the current theories, or even provide evidence it was more than a coincidence. Particularly, is the Australian experience in any way different or unique. From what I have read, it would appear science generally believes there was a large, global collapse of megafauna population in the late Pleistocene leading to the extinction of many species and that humans played a role in this. The problem is, this mostly took place between 100,000 and 50,000 years ago and was pretty much all over by 46,000 ya. Was the population of humans in Australia at the time significant enough to have wiped out so many species? Science rightly asks questions and looks for answers. One simplistic answer is probably not the full story. So did humans alone kill off the megafauna, or did they partially contribute to the extinctions, or did they only end the last renascence of an already failing fauna?
Some might find this paper - (Late-surviving megafauna in Tasmania, Australia, implicate human involvement in their extinction) - interesting because it has a Tassie flavour.
The post by doogs earlier summarised the popular thinking - i.e. man or climate or a combination of the two. (unless of course you believe they were wiped out by "teasers" using them for random target practice!)Happy Pirate wrote:I tend to agree with your inclination that it was a combination of the two.
walkinTas wrote:The post by doogs earlier summarised the popular thinking - i.e. man or climate or a combination of the two. (unless of course you believe they were wiped out by "teasers" using them for random target practice!)Happy Pirate wrote:I tend to agree with your inclination that it was a combination of the two.
walkinTas wrote:Problem one that science has is that it is very difficult to offer definitive proof. We agree there. The more complex the problem the harder it is, because no one has all the facts. No one can know everything. The next group of people to study any area of interest can always make another observation, take another or different measure, add another ounce of evidence, reveal something as yet not considered. And that might change the collective understanding. Problem two that science has is that some people close their minds to alternative possibilities, and then no amount of evidence will suffice.
That said, it doesn't mean that science can't offer plausible explanations to help us better understand. We shouldn't always need definitive proof before we can entertain the possibility. And sometimes with the help of science, we might even be able to reach a situation where there is little doubt or reasonable certainty. The more evidence available the more likely it is this will happen, but, because of 'problem two' that is not always true - for some people anyway.
I think there are a lot of enduring, romantic myths about indigenous live styles. For hunter-gatherer populations, the so called harmony with the land can perhaps be explained by the Lotka–Volterra equation (your Greek fishermen). The fact that man is an omnivore only slightly changes that equation. The theory has it that hunter-gatherer populations (in places like Tasmania) had reached the predicted equalibrium point - stabilised at a level that the environment could sustain. Of course, there is that proof thing again - and as usual, science has an alternative point of view.
I am well aware that some people believe that "fire-stick farming" disproves the natural balance theory, but does it? Or does it simply change the dynamics a little and thereby actually prove the Lotka–Volterra equation. If the population stable point had been reached, even with "fire-stick farming", then isn't the equation proved? But "fire-stick farming" is another topic, and one where science is still collecting the evidence.
walkinTas wrote: "We shouldn't always need definitive proof before we can entertain the possibility"
walkinTas wrote:The next group of people to study any area of interest can always make another observation, take another or different measure, add another ounce of evidence, reveal something as yet not considered.
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