On Jul 31, 2006, at 9:23 AM, Horn, John wrote:

On Behalf Of Nick Arnett

On 7/29/06, Brother John <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

 We ourselves used to be
an enormously fertile and prolific people.  Our ascendancy over
the
Native Americans who were here before us is as much a factor of
the
difference in our relative birthrates as anything else.


Cite, please.  Seems to me that the death rate among the
indigenous people had a whole lot more to do with it.

Jared Diamond talks about this in _Guns, Germs and Steal_.  A more
agricultural society can sustain a higher birthrate than a nomadic
one.  Also, Western European crops had many more calories per pound
than those the Native Americans gathered/cultivated.

 - jmh


One aside, not all natives were wandering hunters. Where I grew up in the Northwest fishing along rivers was a permanent feature of the landscape and I grew up learning about the fields locals had been harvesting for generations untold - and this grooming and brush clearing made the fertile Willamette Valley incredibly easy for my own pioneering Scottish ancestors to convert to family farming. And the local Nez Perce natives were much more eager to assist, adopt and interbreed with strangers than was typical in the East and Midwest.

- Jonathan -



Jonathan Gibson
www.formandfunction.com/word
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