Now now boys, let's not come to blows, before we
examine some experimental evidence.

I direct your attention to the story of Easter Island.
Those enormous stone heads were sort of representative of a
whole style of thinking...

K.

http://www.primitivism.com/easter-island.htm

The Lessons of Easter Island
Clive Ponting

Easter Island is one of the most remote, inhabited places on
earth. Only some 150 square miles in area, it lies in the
Pacific Ocean, 2,000 miles off the west coast of South America
and 1,250 miles from the nearest inhabitable land of Pitcairn
Island. At its peak the population was only about 7,000. Yet,
despite its superficial insignificance, the history of Easter
Island is a grim warning to the world.

The Dutch Admiral Roggeveen, onboard the Arena, was the first
European to visit the island on Easter Sunday 1722. He found a
society in a primitive state with about 3,000 people living in
squalid reed huts or caves, engaged in almost perpetual warfare
and resorting to cannibalism in a desperate attempt to
supplement the meagre food supplies available on the island.
During the next European visit in 1770 the Spanish nominally
annexed the island but it was so remote, underpopulated and
lacking in resources that no formal colonial occupation ever
took place. There were a few more brief visits in the late
eighteenth century, including one by Captain Cook in 1774. An
American ship stayed long enough to carry off twenty-two
inhabitants to work as slaves killing seals on Masafuera Island
off the Chilean coast. The population continued to decline and
conditions on the island worsened: in 1877 the Peruvians removed
and enslaved all but 110 old people and children. Eventually the
island was taken over by Chile and turned into a giant ranch for
40,000 sheep run by a British company, with the few remaining
inhabitants confined to one small village.

What amazed and intrigued the first European visitors was the
evidence, amongst all the squalor and barbarism, of a once
flourishing and advanced society. Scattered across the island
were over 600 massive stone statues, on average over twenty feet
high. When anthropologists began to consider the history and
culture of Easter Island early in the twentieth century they
agreed on one thing. The primitive people living in such
poverty-stricken and backward conditions when the Europeans
first visited the island could not have been responsible for
such a socially advanced and technologically complex task as
carving, transporting anderecting the statues. Easter Island
therefore became a 'mystery'and a wide variety of theories were
advanced to explain its history.  Some of the more fantastic
ideas involved visits by spacemen or lost civilizations on
continents that had sunk into the Pacific leaving Easter Island
as a remnant. The Norwegian archaeologist Thor Heyerdahl, in his
popular book Aku-Aku written in the 1950S, emphasizes the
strange aspectsof the island and the mysteries that lay hidden
in its history. He argued that the island was first settled from
South America and that from there the people inherited a
tradition of monumental sculpture and stonework (similar to the
great Inca achievements). To account for the decline he
introduced the idea that at a late stage other settlers arrived
from the west and began a series of wars between the so-called
'long-ears' and the 'short-ears' that destroyed the complex
society on the island. While this theory is less extravagant
than some of the others that have been put forward it has never
been generally accepted by other archaeologists.

The history of Easter Island is not one of lost civilisations
and esoteric knowledge. Rather it is a striking example of the
dependence of human societies on their environment and of the
consequences of irreversibly damaging that environment. It is
the story of a people who, starting from an extremely limited
resource base, constructed one of the most advanced societies in
the world for the technology they had available. However, the
demands placed on the environment of the island by this
development were immense. When it could no longer withstand the
pressure, the society that had been painfully built up over the
previous thousand years fell with it.

The colonisation of Easter Island belongs to the last phase in
the long-drawn-out movement of human settlement across the
globe. The first people arrived sometime in the fifth century at
a period when the Roman empire was collapsing in western Europe,
China was still in chaos following the fall of the Han empire
two hundred years earlier, India saw the end of the short-lived
Gupta empire and the great city of Teotihuacan dominated most of
Mesoamerica. They were Polynesians and part of a great process
of exploration and settlement across the vast expanse of the
Pacific Ocean. The original Polynesians came from south-east
Asia and they reached the islands of Tonga and Samoa about 1000
BC. From there they moved further east to the Marquesas Islands
about 300 AD and then in two directions, south-east to Easter
Island and north to Hawaii in the fifth century. The last phases
of the movement were to the Society Islands about 6oo and from
there to New Zealand about 800. When this settlement was
complete, the Polynesians were the most widely spread people on
earth encompassing a huge triangle from Hawaii in the north to
New Zealand in the south-west and Easter Island in the
south-east--an area twice the size of the present continental
United States. Their long voyages were made in double canoes,
joined together by a broad central platform to transport and
shelter people, plants, animals and food. These were deliberate
colonization missions and they represented considerable feats of
navigation and seamanship since the prevailing currents and
winds in the Pacific are against west to east travel.

When the first people found Easter Island, they discovered a
world with few resources. The island was volcanic in origin, but
its three volcanoes had been extinct for at least 400 years
before the Polynesian settlers arrived. Both temperatures and
humidity were high and, although the soil was adequate, drainage
was very bad and there were no permanent streams on the island;
the only fresh water available was from lakes inside the extinct
volcanoes. Because of its remoteness the island had only a few
species of plants and animals. There were thirty indigenous
species of flora, no mammals, a few insects and two types of
small lizard. The waters around the island contained very few
fish. The arrival of the first humans did little to improve the
situation. The Polynesians in their home islands depended on a
very limited range of plants and animals for subsistence: their
only domesticated animals were chickens, pigs, dogs and the
Polynesian rat and the main crops were yam, taro, breadfruit,
banana, coconut and sweet potato. The settlers on Easter Island
brought only chickens and rats with them and they soon found
that the climate was too severe for semi-tropical plants such as
breadfruit and coconut and extremely marginal for the usual
mainstays of their diet, taro and yam. The inhabitants were,
therefore, restricted to a diet based mainly on sweet potatoes
and chickens. The only advantage of this monotonous, though
nutritionally adequate, diet was that cultivation of the sweet
potato was not very demanding and left plenty of time for other
activities.

It is not known how many settlers arrived in the fifth century
but they probably numbered no more than twenty or thirty at
most. As the population slowly increased the forms of social
organisation familiar in the rest of Polynesia were adopted. The
basic social unit was the extended family, which jointly owned
and cultivated the land. Closely related households formed
lineages and clans, each of which had its own centre for
religious and ceremonial activity. Each clan was headed by a
chief who was able to organise and direct activities and act as
a focal point for the redistribution of food and other
essentials within the clan. It was this form of organisation and
the competition (and probably conflict) between the clans that
produced both the major achievements of Easter Island society
and ultimately its collapse.

Settlements were scattered across the island in small clusters
of peasant huts with crops grown in open fields. Social
activities were centred around separate ceremonial centres,
which were occupied for part of the year. The chief monuments
were large stone platforms, similar to those found in other
parts of Polynesia and known as ahu, which were used for
burials, ancestor worship and to commemorate past clan chiefs.
What made Easter Island different was that crop production took
very little effort and therefore there was plenty of free time
which the clan chiefs were able to direct into ceremonial
activities. The result was the creation of the most advanced of
all the Polynesian societies and one of the most complex in the
world for its limited resource base. The Easter Islanders
engaged in elaborate rituals and monument construction. Some of
the ceremonies involved recitation from the only known
Polynesian form of writing called rongorongo, which was probably
less a true script and more a series of mnemonic devices. One
set of elaborate rituals was based on the bird cult at Orongo,
where there are the remains of forty-seven special houses
together with numerous platforms and a series of high-relief
rock carvings. The crucial centres of ceremonial activity were
the ahu. Over 300 of these platforms were constructed on the
island, mainly near the coast. The level of intellectual
achievement of at least some parts of Easter Island society can
be judged by the fact that a number of these ahu have
sophisticated astronomical alignments, usually towards one of
the solstices or the equinox. At each site they erected between
one and fifteen of the huge stone statues that survive today as
a unique memorial to the vanished Easter Island society. It is
these statues which took up immense amounts of peasant labour.
The statues were carved, using only obsidian stone tools, at the
quarry at Rano Raraku. They were fashioned to represent in a
highly stylised form a male head and torso. On top of the head
was placed a 'topknot' of red stone weighing about ten tons from
another quarry. The carving was a time-consuming rather than a
complex task. The most challenging problem was to transport the
statues, each some twenty feet in length and weighing several
tens of tons, across the island and the then erect them on top
of the ahu.

The Easter Islanders' solution to the problem of transport
provides the key to the subsequent fate of their whole society.
Lacking any draught animals they had to rely on human power to
drag the statues across the island using tree trunks as rollers.
The population of the island grew steadily from the original
small group in the fifth century to about 7,000 at its peak in
1550. Over time the number of clan groups would have increased
and also the competition between them. By the sixteenth century
hundreds of ahu had been constructed and with them over 600 of
the huge stone statues. Then, when the society was at its peak,
it suddenly collapsed leaving over half the statues only
partially completed around Rano Raraku quarry. The cause of the
collapse and the key to understanding the 'mysteries' of Easter
Island was massive environmental degradation brought on by
deforestation of the whole island.

When the first Europeans visited the island in the eighteenth
century it was completely treeless apart from a handful of
isolated specimens at the bottom of the deepest extinct volcano
crater of Rano Kao. However, recent scientific work, involving
the analysis of pollen types, has shown that at the time of the
initial settlement Easter Island had a dense vegetation cover
including extensive woods. As the population slowly increased,
trees would have been cut down to provide clearings for
agriculture, fuel for heating and cooking, construction material
for household goods, pole and thatch houses and canoes for
fishing. The most demanding requirement of all was the need to
move the large number of enormously heavy statues to ceremonial
sites around the island. The only way this could have been done
was by large numbers of people guiding and sliding them along a
form of flexible tracking made up of tree trunks spread on the
ground between the quarry and the aha. Prodigious quantities of
timber would have been required and in increasing amounts as the
competition between the clans to erect statues grew. As a result
by1600 the island was almost completely deforested and statue
erection was brought to a halt leaving many stranded at the
quarry.

The deforestation of the island was not only the death knell for
the elaborate social and ceremonial life, it also had other
drastic effects on every day life for the population generally.
>From 1500 the shortage of trees was forcing many people to
abandon building houses from timber and live in caves, and when
the wood eventually ran out altogether about a century later
everyone had to use the only materials left. They resorted to
stone shelters dug into the hillsides or flimsy reed huts cut
from the vegetation that grew round the edges of the crater
lakes. Canoes could no longer be built and only reed boats
incapable of long voyages could be made. Fishing was also more
difficult because nets had previously been made from the paper
mulberry tree (which could also be made into cloth) and that was
no longer available. Removal of the tree cover also badly
affected the soil of the island, which would have already
suffered from a lack of suitable animal manure to replace
nutrients taken up by the crops. Increased exposure caused soil
erosion and the leaching out of essential nutrients. As a result
crop yields declined. The only source of food on the island
unaffected by these problems was the chickens. As they became
ever more important, they had to be protected from theft and the
introduction of stone-built defensive chicken houses can be
dated to this phase of the island's history. It became
impossible to support 7,000 people on this diminishing resource
base and numbers fell rapidly.

After 1600 Easter Island society went into decline and regressed
to ever more primitive conditions. Without trees, and so without
canoes, the islanders were trapped in their remote home, unable
to escape the consequences of their self-inflicted,
environmental collapse. The social and cultural impact of
deforestation was equally important. The inability to erect any
more statues must have had a devastating effect on the belief
systems and social organisation and called into question the
foundations on which that complex society had been built. There
were increasing conflicts over diminishing resources resulting
in a state of almost permanent warfare. Slavery became common
and as the amount of protein available fell the population
turned to cannibalism. One of the main aims of warfare was to
destroy the ahu of opposing clans. A few survived as burial
places but most were abandoned. The magnificent stone statues,
too massive to destroy, were pulled down. The first Europeans
found only a few still standing when they arrived in the
eighteenth century and all had been toppled by the 1830s. When
they were asked by the visitors how the statues had been moved
from the quarry, the primitive islanders could no longer
remember what their ancestors had achieved and could only say
that the huge figures had 'walked' across the island. The
Europeans, seeing a treeless landscape, could think of no
logical explanation either and were equally mystified.  Against
great odds the islanders painstakingly constructed, over many
centuries, one of the most advanced societies of its type in the
world. For a thousand years they sustained a way of life in
accordance with an elaborate set of social and religious customs
that enabled them not only to survive but to flourish. It was in
many ways a triumph of human ingenuity and an apparent victory
over a difficult environment. But in the end the increasing
numbers and cultural ambitions of the islanders proved too great
for the limited resources available to them. When the
environment was ruined by the pressure, the society very quickly
collapsed with it leading to a state of near barbarism.

The Easter Islanders, aware that they were almost completely
isolated from the rest of the world, must surely have realised
that their very existence depended on the limited resources of a
small island. After all it was small enough for them to walk
round the entire island in a day or so and see for themselves
what was happening to the forests. Yet they were unable to
devise a system that allowed them to find the right balance with
their environment. Instead vital resources were steadily
consumed until finally none were left. Indeed, at the very time
when the limitations of the island must have become starkly
apparent the competition between the clans for the available
timber seems to have intensified as more and more statues were
carved and moved across the island in an attempt to secure
prestige and status. The fact that so many were left unfinished
or stranded near the quarry suggests that no account was taken
of how few trees were left on the island.

The fate of Easter Island has wider implications too. Like
Easter Island the earth has only limited resources to support
human society and all its demands. Like the islanders, the human
population of the earth has no practical means of escape. How
has the environment of the world shaped human history and how
have people shaped and altered the world in which they live?
Have other societies fallen into the same trap as the islanders?
For the last two million years humans have succeeded in
obtaining more food and extracting more resources on which to
sustain increasing numbers of people and increasingly complex
and technologically advanced societies. But have they been any
more successful than the islanders in finding a way of life that
does not fatally deplete the resources that are available to
them and irreversibly damage their life support system?

-----Original Message-----
From: Jeff and Dorothy Kooistra [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 03, 2005 5:04 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: There is No Tomorrow, by Bill Moyers


Now Mr. Orionworks,

You are certainly old and experienced enough in real life by this time to have 
noticed that Bill Moyers is an idiot.  He is not an
excellent journalist but a propagandist, and never one to let the truth get in 
the way of his axe grinding.  He is an ordained
Southern Baptist minister the same way some pedophiles are ordained priests. 
Before the end of his first sentence he has already, as
usual, made it clear that he thinks everyone who disagrees with him is likely 
delusional.

Why read this crap?

Why post it here?

Here is our excellent "journalist" at work; here is our ordained Southen 
Baptist minister showing his deep learning:

"the book of Revelations"

It's R-E-V-E-L-A-T-I-O-N

Geez!

Kooistra





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