2020-07-03T11:18:48Z
2020-05-29
2020-07-03T11:18:49Z
Collapses of food producer societies are recurrent events in prehistory and have triggered a growing concern for identifying the underlying causes of convergences/divergences across cultures around the world. One of the most studied and used as a paradigmatic case is the population collapse of the Rapa Nui society. Here, we test different hypotheses about it by developing explicit population dynamic models that integrate feedbacks between climatic, demographic and ecological factors that underpinned the sociocultural trajectory of these people. We evaluate our model outputs against a reconstruction of past population size based on archaeological radiocarbon dates from the island. The resulting estimated demographic declines of the Rapa Nui people are linked to the long-term effects of climate change on the island's carrying capacity and, in turn, on the 'per-capita food supply'.
Artículo
Versión publicada
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Ecologia; Canvi climàtic; Pasqua (Xile : Illa); Ecology; Climatic change; Easter Island (Chile)
The Royal Society
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.0662
Proceedings of The Royal Society B. Biological Sciences, 2020, vol. 287, num. 1929
https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2020.0662
cc by (c) Lima et al., 2020
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/