[Aztlan] Climate Change? Been There, Done That
Mario Cabrejos
casal at infotex.com.pe
Mon Mar 24 19:24:45 CDT 2008
Books of The Times
Climate Change? Been There, Done That
By WILLIAM GRIMES
March 21, 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/21/books/21book.html
THE GREAT WARMING
Climate Change and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations
By Brian Fagan
Illustrated. Bloomsbury Press. 282 pages. $26.95.
If you don't think climate change produces winners as well as losers,
consider this: In the 12th and 13th centuries England exported wine to
France. Vineyards also flourished in improbable regions like southern
Norway and eastern Prussia. A centuries-long spell of mild, predictable
weather blessed Western Europe with abundant crops, healthy populations
and budget surpluses sufficient to finance projects like Chartres Cathedral.
This is the credit side of a global balance sheet carefully itemized by
Brian Fagan in "The Great Warming," his fascinating account of shifting
climatic conditions and their consequences from about A.D. 800 to 1300,
often referred to as the Medieval Warm Period. The debit side is appalling:
widespread drought, catastrophic rainfall, toppled dynasties, ruined
civilizations. Abandoned Maya temples in the Yucatan and the desolation of
Angkor Wat, supreme achievement of the Khmer empire, bear witness to
climatic change against which royal power and priestly magic proved
impotent.
Mr. Fagan, an anthropologist who has written on climate change in "The Long
Summer" and "The Little Ice Age," proceeds methodically, working his way
across the globe and reading the evidence provided by tree rings, deep-sea
cores, coral samples, computer weather models and satellite photos. The
picture that emerges remains blurry - scientists still understand little
about such weather-changers as El Niño and La Niña - but it has sharpened
considerably over the past 40 years, enough for Mr. Fagan to present a
coherent account of profound changes in human societies from the American
Southwest to the Huang He River basin in China.
Longer summers and milder winters in Europe, especially stable from 1100 to
1300, allowed Norse explorers to range as far as Greenland and Labrador. At
the same time a population boom in the rest of Europe led to radical
deforestation, as trees were cleared to create farmland. By the end of the
Medieval Warm Period half the forests that covered four-fifths of Western
and Central Europe in A.D. 500 had disappeared.
Across vast swaths of the globe, however, severe, persistent droughts
lasted not just for years but for generations. The Sierras of modern-day
California experienced the severest droughts of the past 4,000 to 7,000
years. Acorn trees died, and along with them peoples largely dependent on
acorns for food. Although data remain sketchy, it seems probable that
extended droughts dried up pastureland on the Central Asian steppe,
propelling the armies of Genghis Khan westward.
In the southern Yucatan arid conditions proved too much for the elaborate
reservoirs, called "water mountains," that the Maya used to irrigate their
fields. Mr. Fagan permits himself an ominous aside: "The analogies to
modern-day California, with its aqueducts for water-hungry Los Angeles, or
to cities such as Tucson, Ariz., with its shrinking aquifers and falling
water table, are irresistible."
Mr. Fagan is as interested in human adaptation as he is in weather. While
California's acorn eaters suffered, peoples in the Southwestern deserts
expanded their diet to include new edible plants. In the Sahara caravan
organizers simply adjusted their routes according to changing rainfall
patterns.
"The camel and its load-carrying saddle proved an effective weapon against
heat and drought even in the worst years, when extreme aridity affected
cattle people living far south of the desert," Mr. Fagan writes.
Northern China got the worst of both worlds during the Medieval Warm
Period: violent climatic swings that resulted in lengthy dry spells or
torrential rainfall. Meanwhile, in the South Pacific, faltering trade winds
allowed Polynesian voyagers to head east, eventually reaching Rapa Nui
(Easter Island) around 1200.
Mr. Fagan has a somewhat rigid, formulaic way of presenting his material.
Well aware that the general reader can handle only limited amounts of
ice-core data, he tries to generate period atmosphere by including
present-tense "you are there" episodes. "The hushed crowd in the plaza
gazes upward to the temple at the summit of the pyramid," one section
begins. A little drama certainly helps, but he overworks this device. The
book is overpopulated with sweating plowmen and fishermen peering into the
mist.
The causes of the Medieval Warm Period remain unclear, and there is debate
over what the actual temperatures were. Mr. Fagan draws one unambiguous
conclusion from the evidence, however, in a final chapter on the
present-day implications of the great warming of a thousand years ago.
Drought is the great enemy, "the silent and insidious killer associated
with global warming," he writes.
Population density has placed enormous pressure on increasingly scarce
water resources. As a result modern droughts, brought on by El Niño events,
have taken an enormous toll in lives and wreaked measureless economic
devastation. Prepare for worse.
"Judging from the arid cycles of a thousand years ago, the droughts of a
warmer future will become more prolonged and harsher," Mr. Fagan writes.
"Even without greenhouse gases, the effects of prolonged droughts would be
far more catastrophic today than they were even a century ago."
For a spark of hope Mr. Fagan offers the example of Chimor, a kingdom in
coastal Peru tormented by El Niño flooding and severe droughts throughout
the Medieval Warm Period. The Chimu people thrived nonetheless by
diversifying their food supply and protecting their scarce water resources.
In a historically arid region with uncertain food supplies, they
successfully tapped their centuries of experience with irrigation, soil
conservation and water management. Look no further for a global-warming
role model.
More information about the Aztlan
mailing list