Meanwhile the mountain of silver at PotosĂ, Bolivia, vastly enriched
Europe, which "went shopping" worldwide. Trading ships coursed the
world’s oceans. One artifact picked up from Peru was the potato---a
single variety of the 6,000 available. When potatoes in Europe turned
out to provide four times the amount of food per acre as wheat, the
previously routine famines came to an end, population soared,
governments became more stable, and they began building global empires.
After 1843 guano shipped by the ton from coastal Peru for fertilizer
introduced high-input agriculture. In Ireland 40% of the exploding
population ate only potatoes. Around 1844 a potato blight arrived from
Mexico, and a million Irish died in the Great Famine and a million more
emigrated.
In China, which has no large lakes and only two major rivers,
agriculture had been limited to two wet regions where rice could be
grown. Two imports from America---maize and sweet potato---could be
farmed in dry lands. As in Europe, population went up. Vast areas were
terraced as Han farmers pushed westward as far as the Mongolian desert.
In heavy rains the terraces melted into the streams, and silt built up
in the lowlands, elevating the rivers as much as 40 feet above the
surrounding terrain, so when they flooded, millions died. "A Katrina
per month for 100 years," as one Chinese meteorologist described it.
The constant calamities weakened the government, and China became ripe
for foreign colonial takeover.
In America two imported diseases---malaria and yellow fever---were
selective in who they killed. Europeans died in huge numbers, but
Africans were one-tenth as susceptible, and so slavery replaced
traditional indentured servitude in all the warm regions that favored
mosquito-borne diseases. As one result, four times as many Africans as
Europeans crossed the Atlantic and began mixing with the remaining
native Americans, giving rise to an endless variety of racial blends and
accompanying vitality throughout the Americas.
During the Q & A, Mann described a potential fresh
eco-convulsion-in-waiting. "There is an area in southeast Asia roughly
the size of Great Britain that is a single giant rubber plantation."
Where rubber trees originally came from in the Amazon there is now a
rubber tree leaf-blight that is starting to spread in Asia. "You could
lose all the rubber trees in three to six months. It would be the
biggest deforestation in a long time." The entire auto industry, he
added, depends on just-in-time delivery of rubber.
1 comment:
lesson learned: get myself a new set of tires soon.
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