Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-v9fdk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-02T21:14:42.344Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Drought, vegetation change, and human history on Rapa Nui (Isla de Pascua, Easter Island)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Daniel Mann*
Affiliation:
Institute of Arctic Biology, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK 99775, USA
James Edwards
Affiliation:
Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA
Julie Chase
Affiliation:
New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY 10016, USA
Warren Beck
Affiliation:
AMS Facility, Department of Physics, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA
Richard Reanier
Affiliation:
Reanier and Associates, Inc. 1215 SW 170th St, Seattle WA 98166, USA
Michele Mass
Affiliation:
Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR 97239, USA
Bruce Finney
Affiliation:
Institute of Marine Sciences, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK 99775, USA
John Loret
Affiliation:
Science Museum of Long Island, Manasset, NY 11030, USA
*
*Corresponding author.E-mail address:[email protected] (D. Mann).

Abstract

Stratigraphic records from lake sediment cores and slope deposits on Rapa Nui document prehistoric human impacts and natural environmental changes. A hiatus in sedimentation in Rano Raraku suggests that this lake basin dried out sometime after 4090–4410 cal yr BP and refilled only decades to centuries before AD 1180–1290. Widespread ecosystem changes caused by forest clearance by Polynesian farmers began shortly after the end of this drought. Terrestrial sections show a chronology of burning and soil erosion similar to the lake cores. Although changing sediment types and shifts in the pollen rain suggest that droughts occurred earlier in the Holocene, as yet there is no evidence for droughts occurring after AD 1180–1290. The timing of the agricultural colonization of Rapa Nui now seems well established at ca. AD 1200 and it was accompanied by rapid deforestation that was probably exacerbated by the island's small size, its droughty climate, and the rarity of primeval fires. Detailed records of a large interval of Rapa Nui's ecological history remain elusive due to the drought hiatus in the Rano Raraku sediment record. We find no evidence for a "rat outbreak impact" on Rapa Nui's vegetation preceding anthropogenic forest clearance.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Elsevier B.V.

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anderson, A., (2002). Faunal collapse, landscape change and settlement history in Remote Oceania. World Archaeology 33, 375390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, A., Chapell, J., Gagan, M., Grove, R., (2006). Prehistoric maritime migration in the Pacific Islands: an hypothesis of ENSO forcing. The Holocene 16, 16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Athens, J. Stephen, David, H., Tuggle, , David, J., Welch, , Jerome, V., Ward, , (2002). Avifaunal extinctions, vegetation change, and Polynesian impacts in prehistoric Hawai'i. Archaeology in Oceania 37, 5778.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bahn, P.G., (1993). The history of human settlement on Rapanui. Fischer, S.R., Easter Island Studies Oxbow Monograph vol. 32, The Short Run Press, Oxford, England., 5355.Google Scholar
Bahn, P.G., Flenley, J.R., (1992). Easter Island, Earth Island. Thames and Hudson, London.Google Scholar
Baker, P.E., (1967). Preliminary account of recent geological investigations on Easter Island. Geological Magazine 104, 116122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boninsegna, J.A., (1988). Santiago de Chile winter rainfall since 1220 as reconstructed by tree rings. Quaternary of South America and Antarctic Peninsula 6, 6787.Google Scholar
Bork, H.-R., Meith, A., (2003). The key role of the Jubea palm trees in the history of Rapa Nui: a provocative interpretation. Rapa Nui Journal 17, 119121.Google Scholar
Brander, J.A., Taylor, M.S., (1998). The simple economics of Easter Island: A Ricardo–Malthus model of renewable resource use. The American Economic Review 88, 119138.Google Scholar
Brown, T.A., Nelson, D.E., Mathewes, R.W., Vogel, J.S., Southon, J.R., (1989). Radiocarbon dating of pollen by accelerator mass spectrometry. Quaternary Research 32, 205212.Google Scholar
Butler, K., Prior, C.A., Flenley, J.R., (2004). Anomalous radiocarbon dates from Easter Island. Radiocarbon 46, 395405.Google Scholar
Carleton, A.M., (2003). Atmospheric teleconnections involving the Southern Ocean. Journal of Geophysical Research 108, C4, 8080 .CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cook, E., Bird, T., Peterson, M., Barbetti, M., Buckley, B., D'Arrigo, R., Francey, R., Tans, P., (1991). Climatic change in Tasmania inferred from a 1089-year tree-ring chronology of huon pine. Science 253, 12661268.Google Scholar
Cummings, L.S., (1998). A review of recent pollen and phytolith studies from various contexts on Easter Island. Stevenson, C.M., Lee, G., Morin, F.J., Easter Island in Pacific Context, South Seas Symposium. Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Easter Island and East Polynesia. University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, 5–10 August 1997 The Easter Island Foundation, Bearsville and Cloud Mountain Press, Los Osos, CA., 100106.Google Scholar
Dalton, T.R., Coats, R.M., (2000). Could institutional reform have saved Easter Island?. Journal of Evolutionary Economics 10, 489506.Google Scholar
Dean, W.E., (1974). Determination of carbonate and organic matter in calcareous sediments and sedimentary rocks by loss on ignition: comparison with other methods. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology 44, 242248.Google Scholar
Diamond, J., (1985). Rats as agents of extermination. Nature 318, 602603.Google Scholar
Diamond, J., (2005). Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. Viking, New York.Google Scholar
Diamond, J., (2007). Easter Island revisited. Science 317, 16921694.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dodson, J.R., Intoh, M., (1999). Prehistory and paleoecology of Yap, Federated States of Micronesia. Quaternary International 59, 1726.Google Scholar
Dransfield, J., Flenley, J.R., King, S.M., Harkness, D.D., Rapu, S., (1984). A recently extinct palm from Easter Island. Nature 312, 750752.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dumont, H.J., Cocquyt, , Fontugne, M., Arnold, M., Reyss, J.-L., Bloemendal, J., Oldfield, F., Steenbergen, C.L.M., Korthals, H.J., Zeeb, B.A., (1998). The end of moai quarrying and its effect on Rano Raraku, Easter Island. Journal of Paleolimnology 20, 409422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ellison, J.C., (1994). Paleo-lake and swamp stratigraphic records of Holocene vegetation and sea-level changes, Mangaia, Cook Islands. Pacific Science 48, 115.Google Scholar
Faegri, K., Iversen, J., (1989). Textbook of Pollen Analysis. John Wiley and Sons, Chichester.Google Scholar
Fall, P.L., (2005). Vegetation change in the coastal-lowland rainforest at Avai'o'vuna Swamp, Vava'u, Kingdom of Tonga. Quaternary Research 64, 451459.Google Scholar
Flenley, J.R., (1993a). The present flora of Easter Island and its origins. Fischer, S.R., Easter Island Studies. Oxbow Monograph vol. 32, The Short Run Press, Oxford, England., 715.Google Scholar
Flenley, J.R., (1993b). The paleoecology of Easter Island, and its ecological disaster. Fischer, S.R., Easter Island Studies. Oxbow Monograph vol. 32, The Short Run Press, Oxford, England., 2745.Google Scholar
Flenley, J.R., (1996). Further evidence of vegetational change on Easter Island. South Pacific Study 16, 135141.Google Scholar
Flenley, J., Bahn, P., (2007). Conflicting views of Easter Island. Rapa Nui Journal 21, 1113.Google Scholar
Flenley, J.R., King, S.M., (1984). Late Quaternary pollen records from Easter Island. Nature 307, 4750.Google Scholar
Flenley, J.R., King, S.M., Jackson, J., Chew, C., (1991). The Late Quaternary vegetational and climatic history of Easter Island. Journal of Quaternary Science 6, 85115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Genz, J., Hunt, T.L., (2003). El Nino/Southern Oscillation and Rapa Nui prehistory. Rapa Nui Journal 17, 714.Google Scholar
Haberzettl, T., Corbella, H., Fey, M., Janssen, S., Lücke, A., Mayr, C., Ohlendorf, C., Schäbitz, F., Schlesser, G.H., Wille, M., Wulf, S., Zolitschka, B., (2007a). Lateglacial and Holocene wet-dry cycles in southern Patagonia: chronology, sedimentology and geochemistry from a lacustrine record from Laguna Potrok Aike, Argentina. The Holocene 17, 297310.Google Scholar
Haberzettl, T., Fey, M., Lücke, A., Maidana, N., Mayr, C., Ohlendorf, C., Schäbitz, F., Schlesser, G.H., Wille, M., Zolitschka, B., (2007b). Climatically induced lake level changes during the last two millennia as reflected in the sediments of Laguna Potrok Aike, southern Patagonoa (Santa Cruz, Argentina). Journal of Paleolimnology 33, 283302.Google Scholar
Hasse, K.M., Stoffers, P., Garbe-Schonberg, C.D., (1997). The petrogenetic evolution of lavas from Easter Island and neighboring seamounts, near-ridge hotspot volcanoes in the southeast Pacific. Journal of Petrology 38, 785813.Google Scholar
Heyerdahl, T., (1961). An introduction to Easter Island. Heyerdahl, T., Ferdon, E.N., Reports of the Norwegian Archaeological Expedition to Easter Island and the East Pacific. Archaeology of Easter Island vol. 1, Forum Publishing House, Stockholm., 2192.Google Scholar
Hoskins, B.J., Hodges, K.I., (2005). A new perspective on southern hemisphere storm tracks. Journal of Climate 18, 41084129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunt, T.L., (2006). Rethinking the fall of Easter Island. American Scientist 94, 412419.Google Scholar
Hunt, T.L., (2007). Rethinking Easter Island's ecological catastrophe. Journal of Archaeological Science 34, 485502.Google Scholar
Hunt, T.L., Lipo, C.P., (2006). Late colonization of Easter Island. Science 311, 16031606.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
International Station Meteorological Climate Summary(1995). Volume 3.0. Table 42, Foreign Station Climatic Summary. United States Federal Climate Complex, Department of Commerce, Asheville, North Carolina, (compact disc)..Google Scholar
Jenny, B., Valero-Garcés, , Vila-Martinéz, , Urritia, R., Geyh, M., Veit, H., (2002). Early to mid-Holocene aridity in central Chile and the southern westerlies: the Laguna Acuelo record (34°S). Quaternary Research 58, 160170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kennett, D., Anderson, A., Prebble, M., Conte, E., Southon, J., (2006). Prehistoric human impacts on Rapa French Polynesia. Antiquity 80, 340354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kirch, P.V., (1996). Late Holocene human-induced modifications to a central Polynesian island ecosystem. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 93, 52965300.Google Scholar
Kirch, P.V., (1997). Microcosmic histories: Island perspectives on "Global" change. American Anthropologist 99, 3042.Google Scholar
Kirch, P.V., (2000). On the Road of the Winds: An Archaeological History of the Pacific Islands before European Contact. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Kitzberger, T., Veblen, T.T., (2003). Influences of climate on fire in northern Patagonia, Argentina. Veblen, T.T., Baker, W.L., Montenegro, G., Swetnam, T.W., Fire Regimes and Climatic Change in Temperate Ecosystems of the Western Americas. Springer-Verlag, 290315.Google Scholar
Krull, E.S., Skjemstad, J.O., Graetz, D., Grice, K., Dunning, W., Cook, G., Parr, J.F., (2003). 13C-depleted charcoal from C4 grasses and the role of occluded carbon in phytoliths. Organic Geochemistry 34, 13371352.Google Scholar
Ladefoged, T., Stevenson, C., Vitousek, P., Chadwick, O., (2005). Soil nutrient depletion and the collapse of Rapa Nui society. Rapa Nui Journal 19, 100105.Google Scholar
La Pérouse Jean , F.G. De, A Voyage around the World Performed in the Years 1785, 1786, 1787, and 1788 by the Boussole and Astrolabe vol. 1, Da Capo Press, New York., 1799.Google Scholar
Long, C.J., Whitlock, C., Bartlein, P.J., Millsaugh, S.H., (1998). A 9000-year fire history from the Oregon Coast Range, based on a high-resolution charcoal study. Canadian Journal of Forest Research 28, 774787.Google Scholar
MacIntyre, F., (2001). ENSO, climatic variability, and the Rapanui, Part II. Oceanography and Rapa Nui. Rapa Nui Journal 15, 8394.Google Scholar
Maldonado, A., Villagrán, C., (2002). Paleoenvironmental changes in the semiarid coast of Chile (∼32°S) during the last 6200 ca years inferred from a swamp-forest pollen record. Quaternary Research 58, 130138.Google Scholar
Mann, D., Chase, J., Edwards, J., Beck, W., Reanier, R., Mass, M., (2003). Prehistoric destruction of the primeval soils and vegetation of Rapa Nui (Isla de Pascua, Easter Island). Loret, J., Tanacredi, J.T., Easter Island: Scientific Exploration into the World's Environmental Problems in Microcosm. Kluwer Academic/Plenum, New York., 133153.Google Scholar
Markgraf, V., (1998). Past climates of South America. Hobbs, J.E., Lindesay, J.A., Bridgman, H.A., Climates of the Southern Continents: Present, Past and Future. Chichester, United Kingdom., 249264.Google Scholar
Markgraf, V., Bradbury, J.P., Schwalb, A., Burns, S., Stern, C., Ariztegui, D., Gilli, A., Anselmetti, F.S., Stine, S., Maidana, N., (2003). Holocene paleolimnology of southern Patagonia: limnological and environmental history of Lago Cardiel, Argentina. The Holocene 13, 581591.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mayr, C., Wille, M., Haberzettl, T., Fey, M., Janssen, S., Lücke, A., Ohlendorf, C., Oliva, G., Schäbitz, F., Schlesser, G.H., Zolitschka, B., (2007). Holocene variability of the southern hemisphere westerlies in Argentinean Patagonia (52°S). Quaternary Science Reviews 26, 579584.Google Scholar
McCall, G., (1993). Little Ice Age: some speculations for Rapanui. Rapa Nui Journal 7, 6570.Google Scholar
McCormac, F.G., Hogg, A.G., Blackwell, P.G., Buck, C.E., Higham, T.F.G., Reimer, P.J., (2004). ShCal04 Southern Hemisphere Calibration, 0–11.0 Cal Kyr BP. Radiocarbon 46, 10871092.Google Scholar
McGlone, M.S., Wilmshurst, J.M., (1999a). Dating initial Maori impact in New Zealand. Quaternary International 59, 516.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGlone, M.S., Wilmshurst, J.M., (1999b). A Holocene record of climate, vegetation change and peat bog development, east Otago, South Island, New Zealand. Journal of Quaternary Science 14, 239254.3.0.CO;2-9>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McGlone, M.S., Kershaw, A.P., Markgraf, V., (1992). El Niño/Southern Oscillation and climatic variability in Australasian and South American paleoenvironmental records. Diaz, H.F., Markgraf, V., El Niño: Historical and paleoclimatic aspects of the Southern Oscillation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge., 435462.Google Scholar
Meith, A., Bork, H.-R., (2003). Diminution and degradation of environmental resources by prehistoric land use on Poike Peninsula, Easter Island (Rapa Nui). Rapa Nui Journal 17, 3442.Google Scholar
Meith, A., Bork, H.-R., (2005). History, origin and extent of soil erosion on Easter Island (Rapa Nui). Catena 63, 244260.Google Scholar
Mucciarone, D.A., Dunbar, R.B., (2003). Stable isotope record of El Niño-Southern Oscillation events from Easter Island. Loret, J., Tanacredi, J.T., Easter Island: Scientific Exploration into the World's Environmental Problems in Microcosm. Kluwer Academic/Plenum, New York., 113132.Google Scholar
Mulloy, W., (1970). A speculative reconstruction of techniques of carving, transporting, and erecting Easter Island statues. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology in Oceania 5, 123.Google Scholar
Nakamura, H., Shimpo, A., (2004). Seasonal variations in the Southern Hemisphere storm tracks and jet streams as revealed in a reanalysis dataset. Journal of Climate 17, 18281844.Google Scholar
Nunn, P.D., (2000). Environmental catastrophe in the Pacific islands around A D. 1300. Geoarchaeology 15, 715740.Google Scholar
Nunn, P.D., Britton, J.M.R., (2001). Human–environment relationships in the Pacific islands around AD 1300. Environment and History 7, 322.Google Scholar
Orliac, C., (2000). The woody vegetation of Easter Island between the early 14th and the mid-17th centuries AD. Stevenson, C.M., Ayres, W.S., Easter Island Archaeology: Research on Early Rapa Nui Culture. Easter Island Foundation. 211220.Google Scholar
Orliac, C., Orliac, M., (1998). The disappearance of Easter Island's forest: over-exploitation or climatic catastrophe?. Stevenson, C.M., Lee, G., Morin, F.J., Easter Island in Pacific Context, South Seas Symposium. Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Easter Island and East Polynesia. University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, August 5–10 1997 The Easter Island Foundation, Bearsville and Cloud Mountain Press, Los Osos, CA., 129134.Google Scholar
Orliac, C., Orliac, M., (2005). La flore disparue de l'île de Pâques. Les Novelles de l'Archéologie 102, 2933.Google Scholar
Peteet, D.M., Beck, W., Ortiz, J., O'Connell, S., Kurdyla, D., Mann, D.H., (2003). Rapid vegetational and sediment change from Rano Aroi crater, Easter Island. Loret, J., Tanacredi, J.T., Easter Island: Scientific Exploration into the World's Environmental Problems in Microcosm. Kluwer Academic/Plenum, New York., 8192.Google Scholar
Porteous, J.D., (1981). The Modernization of Easter Island. Western Geographical Series, Department of Geography, University of Victoria, Victoria. vol. 19, British Columbia, Canada., 304 pp.Google Scholar
Reimer, P.J., (and 28 others), , (2004). IntCal04 terrestrial radiocarbon age calibration, 0–26 cal kyr BP. Radiocarbon 46, 10291058.Google Scholar
Reuveny, R., Decker, C.S., (2000). Easter Island: historical anecdote or warning for the future?. Ecological Economics 35, 271287.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reynolds, K., (1994). Rapa Nui. Warner Bros., Burbank., director.Google Scholar
Rolett, B., Diamond, J., (2004). Environmental predictors of pre-European deforestation on Pacific islands. Nature 431, 443446.Google Scholar
Skottsberg, C., The Natural History of Juan Fernandez and Easter Island vol. 1, Almqvist and Wilsells, Uppsala.Google Scholar
Solman, S.A., Menéndez, C.G., (2002). ENSO-related variability of the Southern Hemisphere winter storm track over the eastern Pacific-Atlantic sector. Journal of Atmospheric Sciences 59, 21282140.Google Scholar
Steadman, D.W., (2006). Extinction and Biogeography of Tropical Pacific Birds. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Steadman, D.W., Casanova, P.V., Ferrando, C.C., (1994). Stratigraphy, chronology, and cultural context of an early faunal assemblage from Easter Island. Asian Perspectives 33, 7996.Google Scholar
Stevenson, C.M., Jackson, T.L., Mieth, A., Bork, H.-R., Ladefoged, T.N., (2006). Prehistoric and early historic agriculture at Maunga Orito, Easter Island (Rapa Nui), Chile. Antiquity 80, 919936.Google Scholar
Stevenson, C.M., Wozniak, J., Haoa, S., (1999). Prehistoric agricultural production on Easter Island (Rapa Nui), Chile. Antiquity 73, 801812.Google Scholar
Stretten, N.A., Zillman, J.W., (1984). Climate of the South Pacific Ocean. Van Loon, H., Climates of the Oceans. World Survey of Climatology (H.E. Landsberg, Editor in Chief) vol. 15, Elsevier, New York., 263430.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M., Polach, , (1977). Discussion: Reporting of 14C data. Radiocarbon 19, 355363.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M., Reimer, P.J., Reimer, R.W., (2007). CALIB 5.0.1. (http://calib.qub.ac.uk/calib/).Google Scholar
Towns, D.R., Atkinson, I.A.E., Daugherty, C.H., (2006). Have the harmful effects of introduced rats been exaggerated?. Biological Invasions 8, 863891.Google Scholar
Trenberth, K.E., (1991). Storm tracks in the Southern Hemisphere. Journal of Atmospheric Science 48, 21592178.Google Scholar
Veblen, T.T., Kitzberger, T., Raffaele, E., Lorenz, D.C., (2003). Fire history and vegetation change in northern Patagonia, Argentina. Veblen, T.T., Baker, W.L., Montenegro, G., Swetnam, T.W., Fire Regimes and Climatic Change in Temperate Ecosystems of the Western Americas. Springer-Verlag, 259289.Google Scholar
Villalba, R., (1990). Climatic fluctuations in northern Patagonia during the last 1000 years as inferred from tree-ring records. Quaternary Research 34, 346360.Google Scholar
Villalba, R., (1994). Tree-ring and glacial evidence for the Medieval Warm Epoch and the Little Ice Age in southern South America. Climatic Change 26, 183197.Google Scholar
Villalba, R., (1998). Tree-ring based reconstructions of northern Patagonia precipitation since AD 1600. The Holocene 8, 659674.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilmshurst, J.M., (1997). The impact of human settlement on vegetation and stability in Hawke's Bay, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Botany 35, 97111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilmshurst, J.M., Higham, T.F.G., (2004). Using rat gnawed seeds to independently date the arrival of rats and humans to New Zealand. The Holocene 14, 801806.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilmshurst, J.M., McClone, M.S., Charman, D.J., (2002). Holocene vegetation and climate change in southern New Zealand: linkages between forest composition and quantitative surface moisture reconstructions from an ombrogenous bog. Journal of Quaternary Science 17, 653666.Google Scholar
Wright, C.S., Diaz, V., (1962). Soils and agricultural development of Easter Island (Pascua), Chile. Quarterly Report Supplement Number 1 Ministry of Agriculture, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
Yen, D.E., (1974). The Sweet Potato and Oceania: An essay in ethnobotany. Bernice P. Bishop Museum Bulletin 236.Google Scholar