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 Why Societies Collapse: Jared Diamond at Princeton University
 
 Sunday 27 October 2002, Produced by Kirsten Garrett
 
 Program Transcript
 
 Kirsten Garrett: Throughout human history, societies, civilisations have
 prospered and collapsed over time.  The reasons, obviously, have lessons
 for the whole of our intricately interlinked planet today. 
 
 At Princeton University in America, earlier this month, eminent professor
 Jared Diamond gave a speech about the collapse of ancient societies. And
 today, Background Briefing will broadcast that talk, edited and including
 some questions and answers at the end. 
 
 Hallo, I'm Kirsten Garrett. 
 
 Introducing Jared Diamond was Michael Cook. He's Professor of Islamic
 Studies at Princeton. 
 
 Michael Cook: There's something that you need to remember about
 biologists. In one respect they're rather like the germs that they study,
 that's to say they can jump species. And more than that, they can jump
 whole orders. And that's exactly what Professor Diamond has done. From
 birds, he went on to develop a lively interest in primates, including the
 primate species which is so abundantly present in this room tonight. In
 this field too, he's published a couple of books, but this time they're
 books that you and I will find fully accessible. The first one which he
 published back in 1992 is called, it has a rather teasing title, 'The
 Third Chimpanzee', and what he's telling us is that we humans could
 perfectly well be classified as just another species of chimp. The second
 book has an even more inflammatory title. It's called 'Why is Sex Fun?'
 and it's such a hot item that if you go to the library they won't let you
 have it for more than three hours at a stretch. 
 
 But it is nevertheless, like everything else that Professor Diamond
 writes, it's a serious answer to a serious question. 
 
 Kirsten Garrett: In his introduction, Professor Michael Cook went on to
 talk about the book 'Guns, Germs and Steel' for which Jared Diamond won
 the Pulitzer Prize. 
 
 Michael Cook: At the heart of 'Guns, Germs and Steel', is the most
 illuminating account that I've ever read of the single most important
 event that ever took place in the history or pre-history of the Near East,
 namely the emergence, the earliest emergence of farming on this planet
 some 10,000 years ago. But having said that, having made the connection, I
 suppose that I really do have to admit that the book isn't just a
 contribution to Near Eastern studies. It also deals with the emergence of
 farming elsewhere on the planet, and it analyses the long-term
 consequences of that momentous development. In other words, you could
 pretty much say that the book poses and answers the question, How did we
 get to where we are now? 
 
 Kirsten Garrett: And so to Professor Jared Diamond himself. 
 
 Applause
 
 Kirsten Garrett: He's a tall, slender man with a small beard, and as he
 speaks Jared Diamond strides up and down the stage, almost chatting to the
 large audience.  He spoke of once-vibrant societies such as the one that
 built Angkor Wat, the Mayan civilisation, the Easter Islands, Greater
 Zimbabwe, and the Indus Valley. 
 
 Jared Diamond: Why did these ancient civilisations abandon their cities
 after building them with such great effort? Why these ancient collapses?
 This question isn't just a romantic mystery. It's also a challenging
 intellectual problem. Why is it that some societies collapsed while others
 did not collapse? 
 
 But even more, this question is relevant to the environmental problems
 that we face today; problems such as deforestation, the impending end of
 the tropical rainforests, over-fishing, soil erosion, soil salinisation,
 global climate change, full utilisation of the world's fresh water
 supplies, bumping up against the photosynthetic ceiling, exhaustion of
 energy reserves, accumulation of toxics in water, food and soil, increase
 of the world's population, and increase of our per capita input. The main
 problems that threaten our existence over the coming decades.  What if
 anything, can the past teach us about why some societies are more unstable
 than others, and about how some societies have managed to overcome their
 environmental problems. Can we extract from the past any useful guidance
 that will help us in the coming decades? 
 
 "Some of these romantic mystery collapses have been self-inflicted
 ecological suicides, resulting from inadvertent human impacts on the
 environment." 
 
 There's overwhelming recent evidence from archaeology and other
 disciplines that some of these romantic mystery collapses have been
 self-inflicted ecological suicides, resulting from inadvertent human
 impacts on the environment, impacts similar to the impacts causing the
 problems that we face today. Even though these past societies like the
 Easter Islanders and Anasazi had far fewer people, and were packing far
 less potent destructive practices than we do today. 
 
 It turns out that these ancient collapses pose a very complicated problem.
 It's not just that all these societies collapsed, but one can also think
 of places in the world where societies have gone on for thousands of years
 without any signs of collapse, such as Japan, Java, Tonga and Tikopea.
 What is it then that made some societies weaken and other societies
 robust? It's also a complicated problem because the collapses usually
 prove to be multi-factorial. This is not an area where we can expect
 simple answers. 
 
 What I'm talking about is the collapses of societies and their
 applications to the risks we face today.  This may sound initially
 depressing, but you'll see that my main conclusions are going to be
 upbeat. 
 
 Kirsten Garrett: You're listening to an edited version of a talk given by
 Jared Diamond who's Professor of Physiology at UCLA, but who gave this
 talk at Princeton University a few weeks ago. 
 
 The first example he gave to illustrate the sorts of problems communities
 accumulate was the American State of Montana. Not many years ago, it was
 one of the wealthiest in America, wealth based on copper mining, forestry
 and agriculture. Now it's very poor. Mining has gone, leaving terrible
 environmental damage, 70% of the children in Montana are on Food Aid,
 logging and farming are in decline. What happened was that the mining,
 forestry and agriculture which earned so much wealth, became destructive.
 Montana now has terrible forest fires, salinisation, erosion, weeds and
 animal diseases, and population decline. Professor Jared Diamond. 
 
 Jared Diamond: If Montana were an isolated country, Montana would be in a
 state of collapse. Montana is not going to collapse, because it's
 supported by the rest of the United States, and yet other societies have
 collapsed in the past, and are collapsing now or will collapse in the
 future, from problems similar to those facing Montana. The same problems
 that we've seen throughout human history, problems of water, forests,
 topsoil, irrigation, salinisation, climate change, erosion, introduced
 pests and disease and population; problems similar to those faced by
 Montanans today are the ones posing problems in Afghanistan, Pakistan,
 China, Australia, Nepal, Ethiopia and so on. But those countries,
 Afghanistan, Pakistan etcetera have the misfortune not to be embedded
 within a rich country that supports them, like the United States. 
 
 Visiting Montana again just brought home to me that these problems of
 ancient civilisations are not remote problems of romantic mysterious
 people, they're problems of the modern world including of the United
 States. I mentioned then that there's a long list of past societies that
 did collapse, but there were also past societies that did not collapse. 
 What is it then that makes some societies more vulnerable than others?
 
 Environmental factors clearly play a role, archaeological evidence
 accumulated over the last several decades has revealed environmental
 factors behind many of these ancient collapses. Again, to appreciate the
 modern relevance of all this, if one asked an academic ecologist to name
 the countries in the modern world that suffer from most severe problems of
 environmental damage and of over-population, and if this ecologist never
 read the newspapers and didn't know anything about modern political
 problems, the ecologist would say "Well that's a no-brainer, the countries
 today that have ecological and populations, there are Haiti, Somalia,
 Rwanda, Burundi, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Nepal, the Philippines,
 Indonesia, Solomon Islands." Then you ask a politician who doesn't know,
 or a strategic planner who knows or cares nothing about ecological
 problems, what you see is the political tinderboxes of the modern world,
 the danger spots, and the politician or strategic planner would say "It's
 a no-brainer; Haiti, Somalia, Rwanda, Burundi, Iraq, Afghanistan,
 Pakistan, Nepal, the Philippines, Indonesia, Solomon Islands", the same
 list. And that simply makes the point that countries that get into
 environmental trouble are likely to get into political trouble both for
 themselves and to cause political troubles around the world. 
 
 In trying to understand the collapses of ancient societies, I quickly
 realised that it's not enough to look at the inadvertent impact of humans
 on their environment. It's usually more complicated. Instead I've arrived
 at a checklist of five things that I look at to understand the collapses
 of societies, and in some cases all five of these things are operating. 
 Usually several of them are. 
 
 The first of these factors is environmental damage, inadvertent damage to
 the environment through means such as deforestation, soil erosion,
 salinisation, over-hunting etc. 
 
 The second item on the checklist is climate change, such as cooling or
 increased aridity. People can hammer away at their environment and get
 away with it as long as the climate is benign, warm, wet, and the people
 are likely to get in trouble when the climate turns against them, getting
 colder or drier. So climate change and human environmental impact
 interact, not surprisingly. 
 
 Still a third consideration is that one has to look at a society's
 relations with hostile neighbours. Most societies have chronic hostile
 relations with some of their neighbours and societies may succeed in
 fending off those hostile neighbours for a long time. They're most likely
 to fail to hold off the hostile neighbours when the society itself gets
 weakened for environmental or any other reasons, and that's given rise for
 example, to the long-standing debate about the fall of the Western Roman
 Empire. Was the conquest by Barbarians really a fundamental cause, or was
 it just that Barbarians were at the frontiers of the Roman Empire for many
 centuries? Rome succeeded in holding them off as long as Rome was strong,
 and then when Rome got weakened by other things, Rome failed, and fell to
 the Barbarians. And similarly, we know that there were military factors in
 the fall of Angkor Wat in Cambodia. So relations with hostiles interacts
 with environmental damage and climate change.
 
 "If one of those friendly societies itself runs into environmental
 problems and collapses for environmental reasons, that collapse may then
 drag down their trade partners." 
 
 Similarly, relations with friendlies interacts. Almost all societies
 depend in part upon trade with neighbouring friendly societies, and if one
 of those friendly societies itself runs into environmental problems and
 collapses for environmental reasons, that collapse may then drag down
 their trade partners. It's something that interests us today, given that
 we are dependent for oil upon imports from countries that have some
 political stability in a fragile environment. 
 
 And finally in addition to those four factors on the checklist, one always
 has to ask about people's cultural response. Why is it that people failed
 to perceive the problems developing around them, or if they perceived
 them, why did they fail to solve the problems that would eventually do
 them in? Why did some peoples perceive and recognise their problems and
 others not? 
 
 I'll give you four examples of these past societies that collapsed. One is
 Easter Island, I'll discuss it first because Easter is the simplest case
 we've got, the closest approximation to a collapse resulting purely from
 human environmental damage. 
 
 The second case are the collapses of Henderson and Pitcairn Island in the
 Pacific, which were due to the combination of self-inflicted environmental
 damage, plus the loss of external trade due to the collapse of a friendly
 trade partner. 
 
 Third I'll discuss, closer to home the Anasazi in the US south-west whose
 collapse was a combination of environmental damage and climate change. 
 
 And then finally I'll mention the Greenland Norse who ended up all dead
 because of a combination of all five of these factors. 
 
 So let's take then the first of these examples, the collapse of Easter
 Island society. Any of you here in this room, have any of you had the good
 fortune to have visited Easter Island? Good for you, you lucky person, I'm
 going there next month, I've wanted for decades to go there. And Easter is
 the most remote habitable scrap of land in the world; it's an island in
 the Pacific, 2,000 miles west of the coast of Chile, and something 1300
 miles from the nearest Polynesian island. It was settled by other
 Polynesians coming from the west, sometime around AD 800 and it was so
 remote that after Polynesians arrived at Easter Island, nobody else
 arrived there. Nobody left Easter as far as we know, and so the Easter
 story is uncomplicated by relations with external hostiles or friendlies.
 There weren't any. Easter Islanders rose and fell by themselves. 
 
 Easter is a relatively fragile environment, dry with 40 inches of rain per
 year. It's most famous because of the giant stone statutes - those big
 statues weighing up to 80 tons - stone statues that were carved in a
 volcanic quarry and then dragged up over the lift of the quarry and then
 13 miles down to the coast and then raised up vertically onto platforms,
 all this accomplished by people without any draught animals, without
 pulleys, without machines. These 80 ton statues were dragged and erected
 under human muscle power alone. And yet when Europeans arrived at Easter
 in 1722, the statues that the islanders themselves had erected at such
 great personal effort, the islanders were in the process of throwing down
 their own statues, Easter Island society was in a state of collapse. How,
 why and who erected the statues, and why were they thrown down? 
 
 Well the how, why and who has been settled in the last several decades by
 archaeological discoveries. Easter Islanders were typical Polynesians, and
 the cause of the collapse became clear from archaeological work in the
 last 15 years, particularly from paeleo-botannical work and identification
 of animal bones in archaeological sites. Today Easter Island is barren. 
 It's a grassland, there are no native trees whatsoever on Easter Island,
 not a likely setting for the development of a great civilisation, and yet
 these paeleo-botannical studies, identifying pollen grains and lake cores
 show that when the Polynesians arrived at Easter Island, it was covered by
 a tropical forest that included the world's largest palm tree and
 dandelions of tree height. And there were land birds, at least six species
 of land birds, 37 species of breeding sea-birds - the largest collection
 of breeding sea-birds anywhere in the Pacific. 
 
 Polynesians settled Easter, they began to clear the forest for their
 gardens, for firewood, for using as rollers and levers to raise the giant
 statues, and then to build canoes with which to go out into the ocean and
 catch porpoises and tuna. In the oldest archaeological one sees the bones
 of porpoises and tuna that the people were eating. They ate the land
 birds, they ate the sea-birds, they ate the fruits of the palm trees. The
 population of Easter grew to an estimated about 10,000 people, until by
 the year 1600 all of the trees and all of the land birds and all but one
 of the sea-birds on Easter Island itself were extinct. Some of the
 sea-birds were confined to breeding on offshore stacks. 
 
 "The largest animal left to eat with the disappearance of porpoises and
 tuna were humans..." 
 
 The deforestation and the elimination of the birds had consequences for
 people. First without trees, they could no longer transport and erect the
 statues, so they stopped carving statues. Secondly, without trees they had
 no firewood except of their own agricultural wastes. Thirdly, without
 trees to cover the ground, they suffered from soil erosion and hence
 agricultural yields decreased, and then without trees they couldn't build
 canoes, so they couldn't go out to the ocean to catch porpoises, there
 were only a few sea-birds left because they didn't have pigs the largest
 animal left to eat with the disappearance of porpoises and tuna were
 humans. And Polynesian society then collapsed in an epidemic of
 cannibalism. The spear points from that final phase still litter the
 ground of Easter Island today. The population crashed from about 10,000 to
 an estimated 2,000 with no possibility of rebuilding the original society
 because the trees, most of the birds and some of the soil were gone. 
 
 I think one of the reasons that the collapse of Easter Island so grabs
 people is that it looks like a metaphor for us today. Easter Island,
 isolated in the middle of the Pacific Island, nobody to turn to to get
 help, nowhere to flee once Easter Island itself collapsed. In the same way
 today, one can look at Planet Earth in the middle of the galaxy and if we
 too get into trouble, there's no way that we can flee, and no people to
 whom we can turn for help out there in the galaxy. 
 
 I can't help wondering what the Islander who chopped down the last palm
 tree said as he or she did it. Was he saying, 'What about our jobs? Do we
 care more for trees than for our jobs, of us loggers?' Or maybe he was
 saying, 'What about my private property rights?  Get the big government of
 the chiefs off my back.' Or maybe he was saying, 'You're predicting
 environmental disaster, but your environmental models are untested, we
 need more research before we can take action.' Or perhaps he was saying,
 'Don't worry, technology will solve all our problems.'
 
 Laughter
 
 Kirsten Garrett: After speaking about several other Pacific Island nations
 and what happened to them, Professor Jared Diamond went on to talk of the
 Anasazi, an Indian nation later called the Pueblo, in what is now the
 United States. 
 
 Jared Diamond: My next example involves the Anasazi in our south west, in
 the four corners area of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah. How many of
 you here have been to either Mesa Verde or Chaco Canyon? OK, looks like
 nearly half of you. It's very striking to visit say Chaco Canyon where
 there are still the ruins of the biggest skyscrapers erected in the United
 States until the Chicago skyscrapers erected in Chicago's loop in the
 1870s and 1880s. But the skyscrapers of Chaco Canyon were erected by
 native Americans, the Anasazi. Up to 6-storey buildings, with up to 600
 rooms. The Anasazi build-up began around AD 600 with the arrival of the
 Mexican crops of corn, squash and beans, and in that relatively dry area.
 Again it's very striking today to drive through an area where today either
 nobody is living at all, or nobody's living by agriculture. At Chaco
 Canyon itself there are a couple of houses of National Park Rangers
 importing their food, and then nobody else living within 20 or 30 miles.
 And yet to realise, and to see the remains on the ground, this used to be
 a densely populated agricultural environment. 
 
 The Anasazi were ingenious at managing to survive in that environment,
 with low fluctuating, unpredictable rainfall, and with nutrient-poor
 soils. The population built up. They fed themselves with agriculture, in
 some cases irrigation agriculture, channelled very carefully to flood out
 over the fields. They cut down trees for construction and firewood. In
 each area they would develop environmental problems by cutting down trees
 and exhausting soil nutrients, but they dealt with those problems by
 abandoning their sites after a few decades and moving on to a new site.
 It's possible to reconstruct Anasazi history in great detail for two
 reasons: tree rings, because this is a dry climate, the south-west. From
 tree-rings you can identify from the rings on the roof beams, what year -
 1116, not 1115 AD - what year the tree in that roof was cut down, and also
 those cute little rodents in the south-west, pack rats, that run around
 gathering bits of vegetation in their nests and then abandoning their
 nests after 50 years, a pack rat midden is basically a time capsule of the
 vegetation growing within 50 yards of a pack rat midden over a period of
 50 years. And my friend Julio Betancourt who was near an Anasazi ruin and
 happened to see a pack rat midden whose dating he knew nothing about. He
 was astonished to see in what's now a treeless environment, in this pack
 rat midden were the needles of pinion pine and juniper. So Julio wondered
 whether that was an old midden. He took it back, radio carbon-dated it,
 and lo and behold it was something like AD 800. So the pack-rat middens
 are time capsules of local vegetation allowing us to reconstruct what
 happened. 
 
 What happened is that the Anasazi deforested the area around their
 settlements until they were having to go further and further away for
 their fuel and their construction timber. At the end they were getting
 their logs, neatly cut logs, uniform weighing on the average 600 pounds,
 16 feet logs, were cut at the end on tops of mountains up to 75 miles away
 and about 4,000 feet above the Anasazi settlements, and then dragged back
 by people with no transport or pack animals, to the Anasazi settlements
 themselves. So deforestation spread. That was the one environmental
 problem. 
 
 The other environmental problem was the cutting of arroyos. In the
 south-west when water flow gets channelled for example in irrigation
 ditches, then vast water flow is run off in desert rains. It digs a trench
 in the channel, and digs a trench deeper and deeper so those of you who've
 been to Chaco Canyon will have seen those arroyos up to 30 feet deep. And
 today, if the water level drops down in the arroyos, that's not a problem
 for farmers, because we've got pumps, but the Anasazi did not have pumps,
 and so when the irrigation ditches became incised by arroyo cutting and
 when the water level in the ditches dropped down below the field levels,
 they could no longer do irrigation agriculture. For a while they got away
 with these inadvertent environmental impacts.  There were droughts around
 1040 and droughts around 1090, but at both times the Anasazi hadn't yet
 filled up the landscape, so they could move to other parts of the
 landscape not yet exploited. And the population continued to grow. 
 
 And then in Chaco Canyon when a drought arrived in 1117, at that point
 there was no more unexploited landscape, no more empty land to which to
 shift. In addition at that point, Chaco Canyon was a complex society. Lots
 of stuff was getting imported into Chaco - stone tools, pottery,
 turquoise, probably food was being imported into Chaco. Archaeologists
 can't detect any material that went out of the Chaco Valley, and whenever
 you see a city into which material stuff is moving and no material stuff
 is leaving, you think that the modern world - the model could be of New
 York City or Rome, or Washington and Rome - that is to say you suspect
 that out of that city is having political control or religious control in
 return for which the peasants in the periphery are supplying their
 imported goods. 
 
 "When you see a rich place without a wall, you can safely infer that the
 rich place was on good terms with its poor neighbours, and when you see a
 wall going up around the rich place, you can infer that there was now
 trouble with the neighbours. " 
 
 When the drought came in 1117 it was a couple of decades before the end.
 Again any of you who have been to Pueblo Benito, will have seen that
 Pueblo Benito was the six storey skyscraper. Pueblo Benito was a big,
 unwalled plaza, until about 20 years before the end, when a high wall went
 up around the plaza. And when you see a rich place without a wall, you can
 safely infer that the rich place was on good terms with its poor
 neighbours, and when you see a wall going up around the rich place, you
 can infer that there was now trouble with the neighbours. So probably what
 was happening was that towards the end, in the drought, as the landscape
 is filled up, the people out on the periphery were no longer satisfied
 because the people in the religious and political centre, were no longer
 delivering the goods. The prayers to the gods were not bringing rain,
 there was not all the stuff to redistribute and they began making trouble.
 And then at the drought of 1117, with no empty land to shift to,
 construction of Chaco Canyon ceased, Chaco was eventually abandoned. Long
 House Valley was abandoned later. The Anasazi had committed themselves
 irreversibly to a complex society, and once that society collapsed, they
 couldn't rebuild it because again they deforested their environment. 
 
 In this case then, the Anasazi case, we have the interaction of well
 understood environmental impact and very well understood climate change
 from the tree rings, from the width of the tree rings, we know how much
 rainfall was falling in each year and hence we know the severity of the
 drought. 
 
 My next to last example involves Norse Greenland. As the Vikings began to
 expand over and terrorise Europe in their raids. The Vikings also settled
 six islands in the North Atlantic. So we have to compare not 80 islands as
 in the Pacific, but 6 islands. Viking settlements survived on Orkney,
 Shetland, Faeroe and Iceland, albeit it with severe problems due to
 environmental damage on Iceland. The Vikings arrived in Greenland, settled
 Greenland AD 984, where they established a Norwegian pastoral economy,
 based particularly on sheep, goats and cattle for producing dairy
 products, and then they also hunted caribou and seal. Trade was important.
 The Vikings in Greenland hunted walruses to trade walrus ivory to Norway
 because walrus ivory was in demand in Europe for carving, since at that
 time with the Arab conquest, elephant ivory was no longer available in
 Europe.  Vikings vanished in the 1400s. There were two settlements; one of
 them disappeared around 1360 and the other sometime probably a little
 after 1440.  Everybody ended up dead. 
 
 The vanishing of Viking Greenland is instructive because it involves all
 five of the factors that I mentioned, and also because there's a detailed,
 written record from Norway, a bit from Iceland and just a few fragments
 from Greenland: a written record describing what people were doing and
 describing what they were thinking. So we know something about their
 motivation, which we don't know for the Anasazi and the Easter Islanders. 
 
 Of the five factors, first of all there was ecological damage due to
 deforestation in this cold climate with a short growing season, cutting
 turf, soil erosion.  The deforestation was especially expensive to the
 Norse Greenlanders because they required charcoal in order to smelt iron
 to extract iron from bogs. Without iron, except for what they could import
 in small quantities from Norway, there were problems in getting iron tools
 like sickles. It got to be a big problem when the Inuit, who had initially
 been absent in Greenland, colonised Greenland and came into conflict with
 the Norse. The Norse then had no military advantage over the Inuit. It was
 not guns, germs and steel. The Norse of Greenland had no guns, very little
 steel, and they didn't have the nasty germs. They were fighting with the
 Inuit on terms of equality, one people with stone and wooden weapons
 against another. 
 
 So problem No.1, ecological damage, problem No.2, climate change. The
 climate in Greenland got colder in the late 1300s and early 1400s as part
 of what's called the Little Ice Age, cooling of the North Atlantic. Hay
 production was a problem. Greenland was already marginal because it's high
 latitude short growing season, and as it got colder, the growing season
 got even shorter, hay production got less, and hay was the basis of Norse
 sustenance. Thirdly, the Norse had military problems with their neighbours
 the Inuit. For example, the only detailed example we have of an Inuit
 attack on the Norse is that the Icelandic annals of the years 1379 say 'In
 this year the scralings (which is an old Norse word meaning wretches, the
 Norse did not have a good attitude towards the Inuit), the wretches
 attacked the Greenlanders and killed 18 men and captured a couple of young
 men and women as slaves.' Eighteen men doesn't seem like a big deal in
 this century of body counts of tens of millions of people, but when you
 consider the population of Norse Greenland at the time, probably about
 4,000 people, 18 adult men stands in the same proportion to the Norse
 population then as if some outsiders were to come into the United States
 today and in one raid kill 1,700,000 adult male Americans. So that single
 raid by the Inuit did make a big deal to the Norse, and that's just the
 only raid that we know about. 
 
 Fourthly, there was the cut-off of trade with Europe because of increasing
 sea-ice, with a cold climate in the North Atlantic. The ships from Norway
 gradually stopped coming. Also as the Mediterranean reopened Europeans got
 access again to elephant ivory, and they became less interested in the
 walrus ivory, so fewer ships came to Greenland. And then finally cultural
 factors, the Norse were derived from a Norwegian society that was
 identified with pastoralism, and particularly valued calves. In Greenland
 it's easier to feed and take care of sheep and goats than calves, but
 calves were prized in Greenland, so the Norse chiefs and bishops were
 heavily invested in the status symbol of calves. The Norse, because of
 their bad attitude towards the Inuit did not adopt useful Inuit
 technology, so the Norse never adopted harpoons, hence they couldn't eat
 whales like the Inuit. They didn't fish, incredibly, while the Inuit were
 fishing. They didn't have dog sleighs, they didn't have skin boats, they
 didn't learn from the Inuit how to kill seals at breeding holes in the
 winter. So the Norse were conservative, had a bad attitude towards the
 Inuit, they built churches and cathedrals, the remains of the Greenland
 cathedral is still standing today at Gardar.  It's as big as the cathedral
 of Iceland, and the stone churches, some of the three-stone churches in
 Greenland are still standing. So this was a society that invested heavily
 in their churches, in importing stained-glass windows and bronze bells for
 the churches, when they could have been importing more iron to trade to
 the Inuit, to get seals and whale meat in exchange for the iron. 
 
 "Greenland then is particularly instructive in showing us that collapse
 due to environmental reasons isn't inevitable. It depends upon what you
 do." 
 
 So there were cultural factors also while the Norse refused to learn from
 the Inuit and refused to modify their own economy in a way that would have
 permitted them to survive. And the result then was that after 1440 the
 Norse were all dead, and the Inuit survived.  Greenland then is
 particularly instructive in showing us that collapse due to environmental
 reasons isn't inevitable. It depends upon what you do. Here are two
 peoples and one did things that let them survive, and the other things did
 not permit them to survive. 
 
 There are a series of factors that make people more or less likely to
 perceive environmental problems growing up around them. One is misreading
 previous experience.  The Greenlanders came from Norway where there's a
 relatively long growing season, so the Greenlanders didn't realise, based
 on their previous experience, how fragile Greenland woodlands were going
 to be. The Greenlanders had the difficulty of extracting a trend from
 noisy fluctuations; yes we now know that there was a long-term cooling
 trend, but climate fluctuates wildly up and down n Greenland from year to
 year;  cold, cold, warm, cold. So it was difficult for a long time
 perceive that there was any long-term trend.  That's similar to the
 problems we have today with recognising global warming. It's only within
 the last few years that even scientists have been able to convince
 themselves that there is a global long-term warming trend. And while
 scientists are convinced, the evidence is not yet enough to convince many
 of our politicians. 
 
 Problem No. 3, short time scale of experience. In the Anasazi area,
 droughts come back every 50 years, in Greenland it gets cold every 500
 years or so; those rare events are impossible to perceive for humans with
 a life span of 40, 50, 70 years. They're perceptible today but we may not
 internalise them. For example, my friends in the Tucson area. There was a
 big drought in Tucson about 40 years ago. The city of Tucson almost
 over-draughted its water aquifers and Tucson went briefly into a period of
 water conservation, but now Tucson is back to building big developments
 and golf courses and so Tucson will have trouble with the next drought. 
 
 Fourthly the Norse were disadvantaged by inappropriate cultural values.
 They valued cows too highly just as modern Australians value cows and
 sheep to a degree appropriate to Scotland but inappropriate to modern
 Australia. And Australians now are seriously considering whether to
 abandon sheep farming completely as inappropriate to the Australian
 environment. 
 
 Finally, why would people perceive problems but still not solve their own
 problems? 
 
 A theme that emerges from Norse Greenland as well as from other places, is
 insulation of the decision making elite from the consequences of their
 actions.  That is to say, in societies where the elites do not suffer from
 the consequences of their decisions, but can insulate themselves, the
 elite are more likely to pursue their short-term interests, even though
 that may be bad for the long-term interests of the society, including the
 children of the elite themselves. 
 
 In the case of Norse Greenland, the chiefs and bishops were eating beef
 from cows and venison and the lower classes were left to eating seals and
 the elite were heavily invested in the walrus ivory trade because of let
 them get their communion gear and their Rhineland pottery and the other
 stuff that they wanted. Even though in the long run, what was good for the
 chiefs in the short run was bad for society. We can see those differing
 insulations of the elite in the modern world today. Of all modern
 countries the one with by far the highest level of environmental awareness
 is Holland.  In Holland, a higher percentage of people belong to
 environmental organisations than anywhere else in the world. And the Dutch
 are also a very democratic people. There are something like 42 political
 parties but none of them ever comes remotely close to a majority, but this
 which would be a recipe for chaos elsewhere, modern Holland, the Dutch are
 very good for reaching decisions. And on my last visit to Holland I asked
 my Dutch friends Why is it this high level of environmental awareness in
 Holland? And they said, 'Look around. Most of us are living in Polders, in
 these lands that have been drained, reclaimed from the sea, they're below
 sea level and they're guided by the dykes'. In Holland everybody lives in
 the Polders, whether you're rich or poor. It's not the case that the rich
 people are living high up on the dykes and the poor people are living down
 in the Polders. So when the dyke is breached or there's a flood, rich and
 poor people die alike. In particular in the North Sea floods in Holland in
 the late '40s and '50s, when the North Sea was swept by winds and tides 50
 to 100 miles inland, all Dutch in the path of the floods died whether they
 were rich or poor. So my Dutch friends explained it to me that in Holland,
 rich people cannot insulate themselves from consequences of their actions.
 They're living in the Polders and therefore there is not the clash between
 their short-term interests and the long-term interests of everybody else.
 The Dutch have had to learn to reach communal decisions. 
 
 Whereas in much of the rest of the world, rich people live in gated
 communities and drink bottled water.  That's increasingly the case in Los
 Angeles where I come from. So that wealthy people in much of the world are
 insulated from the consequences of their actions. 
 
 Well, finally then. I've talked mostly about the past.  What about the
 situation today? There are obvious differences between the environmental
 problems that we face today and the environmental problems in the past. 
 Some of those differences are things that make the situation for us today
 scarier than it was in the past. Today there are far more people alive,
 packing far more potent per capita destructive technology.  Today there
 are 6-billion people chopping down the forests with chains and bulldozers,
 whereas on Easter Island there were 10,000 people with stone axes.  Today,
 countries like the Solomon Islands - wet, relatively robust environments,
 where people lived without being able to deforest the islands for 32,000
 years, within the past 15 years the Solomon Islands have been almost
 totally deforested, leading to a civil war and collapse of government
 within the last year or two. 
 
 Another big difference between today and the past is globalisation. In the
 past, you could get solitary collapses. When Easter Island society
 collapsed, nobody anywhere else in the world knew about it, nobody was
 affected by it. The Easter Islanders themselves, as they were collapsing,
 had no way of knowing that the Anasazi had collapsed for similar reasons a
 few centuries before, and that the Mycenaean Greeks had collapsed a couple
 of thousand years before and that the dry areas of Hawaii were going
 downhill at the same time. But today we turn on the television set and we
 see the ecological damage in Somalia and Afghanistan, or Haiti, and we
 pick up a book and we read about the ecological damage caused in the past. 
 So we have knowledge both in space and time, that ancient peoples did not.
 Today we are not immune from anybody's problems. Again, if 20 years ago
 you would ask someone in strategic assessments to mention a couple of
 countries in the world (in fact I was in on such a conversation)
 completely irrelevant to American interests. The two countries mentioned
 as most irrelevant to American interests were two countries that are
 remote, poor, landlocked, with no potential for causing the United States
 trouble: Somalia and Afghanistan. Which illustrates that today anybody can
 cause trouble for anybody else in the world. A collapse of a society
 anywhere is a global issue, and conversely, anybody anywhere in the world
 now has ways of reaching us. We used to think of globalisation as a way
 that we send to them out there our good things, like the Internet and Coca
 Cola, but particularly in the time since September 11th we've realised
 that globalisation also means that they can send us their bad things like
 terrorists, cholera and uncontrollable immigration. So those are things
 that are against us, but things that are for us is that globalisation also
 means that exchange of information and that information about the past, so
 we are the only society in world history that has the ability to learn
 from all the experiments being carried out elsewhere in the world today,
 and all the experiments that have succeeded and failed in the past. And so
 at least we have the choice of what we want to do about it. Thank you. 
 
 Applause
 
 Kirsten Garrett: That was Professor Jared Diamond from UCLA, speaking at
 Princeton University earlier this month. Then there were some questions
 from members of the audience. 
 
 Man: The impression I get is that you are talking about them primarily in
 relation to environmental factors, you're talking about an elite that
 becomes isolated, insular and operates without being affected by the
 consequences of environmental degradation. What about other cultural
 forces, such as the development of political instability, civil wars,
 people who are low down in the hierarchy that are challenging the order.
 And could it be the societies simply over time devolve towards political
 instability. What about other factors such as disease for example, could
 they play a role as well? 
 
 Jared Diamond: Absolutely. In two minutes I did not do justice to cultural
 factors. There's a large literature on causes of instability and civil
 wars and collapse of States and civil unrest, and it turns out that you
 will go home and say Jared Diamond has a list of eight explanations for
 everything. There are eight variables that people have been able to
 identify: With risk of civil war, for example there's a data base of all
 cases of State failures and civil wars and violent government transitions
 in the last 30 years. People have mined this data base. Would anybody like
 to guess what is the single factor that is the best predictor of the
 collapse of societies in the last couple of decades? This is an unfair
 question because it's so surprising. The strongest predictor is infant and
 child mortality. Countries that have had high infant or child mortality
 are more likely to undergo State collapse, and there are many links,
 including difficulties in the workforce, high ratio of children to adults.
 But in brief, yes, there is a large literature of other cultural factors
 that contribute to the collapse of societies. 
 
 Woman: Talking about culture problems, is there any correlation between
 the level of conservatism in a society and the likelihood of it
 collapsing? 
 
 Jared Diamond: I don't know. This is something that we haven't measured,
 we haven't tried to measure.  Interesting, but I don't know. 
 
 Kirsten Garrett: The next question was not miced, so Professor Jared
 Diamond responded and restated it. 
 
 Jared Diamond: Interesting question. For those of you who didn't hear it:
 Do I think that today there's more reliance that technology will come and
 somehow save us, even though we can't specify how? Yes there certainly is,
 and many of my friends, particularly in the technology sector don't take
 environmental problems so seriously. I'll give you a specific example.
 After 'Guns, Germs and Steel' was published, it was reviewed by Bill Gates
 who liked it and gave it a favourable review, and the result was that I
 had a two-hour discussion with Bill Gates, who is a very thoughtful
 person, and he's interested in lots of things. He probes deeply and he has
 seriously considered positions of his own. The subject turned to
 environmental issues and I mentioned that that's the thing that most
 concerned me for the future of my children, Bill Gates has young children.
 He paused in his thoughtful way and he said, not in a dismissing way, 'I
 have the feeling that technology will solve our environmental problems,
 but what really concerns me is biological terrorism.' Look that's a
 thoughtful response, but many people in the technology sector assume that
 technology will solve our problems. I disagree with that for two reasons. 
 
 One is that technology has created the explosion of modern problems while
 also providing the potential for solving them. But the first thing that
 happens is technology creates the problem and then maybe later it solves
 it, so at best there's a lag. 
 
 The second thing is that the lesson we've learned again and again in the
 environmental area is it's cheaper, much cheaper and more efficacious to
 prevent a problem at the beginning than to solve it by high technology
 later on. So it's costing billions of dollars to clean up the Hudson
 River, and it costs billions of dollars to clean up Montana, it would cost
 a trivial amount to do it right in the beginning.  Therefore, I do not
 look to technology as our saviour. 
 
 Michael Cook: Let us thank Professor Diamond again. 
 
 Applause
 
 Kirsten Garrett: Professor Jared Diamond of UCLA, speaking at Princeton
 University earlier this month about what we can learn from the collapse of
 ancient societies. Professor Diamond won the Pulitzer Prize for his book,
 'Guns, Germs and Steel' in 1997. His talk was edited for this broadcast,
 but the complete speech is audio streamed on the Background Briefing
 website. 
 
 Co-ordinating Producer is Linda McGinness. I'm Kirsten Garrett and you're
 with ABC Radio National. 
 
 
 
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