sustainability freshman inquiry march 1, 2011 jeff fletcher see also: daily log pagedaily log page

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Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log Page

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Page 1: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Sustainability Freshman Inquiry

March 1, 2011

Jeff FletcherSee also: Daily Log Page

Page 2: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Logistics• Questions on Collapse Project?• Recycling Project Follow-up

– Student ideas: How to be heard? – This weekend will reassess rooms and do exit surveys

• Questions on Midterm (this Thursday) study guide?• Thursday After Midterm

– Kathleen Merrigan, U.S. deputy secretary of agriculture, Obama administration initiative “Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food”

• Songs? Michelia?• 2 weeks left after today

– Tues 3/1 Collapse Discussions• Annotated Bibliography Due

– Thur 3/3 Discussion Continued; Midterm 2– Tues & Thur (3/8, 3/10) Presentations; Preview of Next Term

• Follow-up Room Assessments and Surveys• Final Reflection Due

Page 3: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Collapse Chapter Assignments• Finding Articles?

• Chapter 3: The Last People Alive: Pitcairn and Henderson Islands• Chapter 4: The Ancient Ones: The Anasazi and their Neighbors• Chapter 5: The Maya Collapses

Chapter 6: The Viking Prelude and Fugues• Chapter 7: Norse Greenland’s Flowering• Chapter 8: Norse Greenland’s End• Chapter 9: Opposite Paths to Success • Chapter 10: Malthus in Africa: Rwanda’s Genocide• Chapter 11: One Island, Two Peoples, Two Histories: Dominican

Republic and Haiti• Chapter 12: China, Lurching Giant• Chapter 13: "Mining" Australia

Page 4: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Easter Island (Rapa Nui)

Video: Attenborough Explains Easter Island

Easter Island is the south-easternmost of the Pacific Islands. It is small, isolated, and remote.

Page 5: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Geography

Roughly triangular in shape has 3 major volcanoes.

Page 6: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

It is barren and has few trees.

NASA image created by Jesse Allen, Earth Observatory. Landsat 7 image collected

January 3, 2001.

Page 7: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Where did the Easter Islanders come from

The Pacific Islands were settle by a dispersal from Africa, in a route that runs along the south of Asia through Melanesia, then to Australia and Micronesia.

Page 8: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Settlement of the Pacific Islands

600 A.D.

800 A.D. 900 A.D.1200 A.D.

The Pacific Islands were settled from the northwest, probably from Asia and Melanesia, in a series of waves in easterly, then northerly (Hawaii) and southerly (New Zealand) directions

1000 B.C. 600 A.D.

500 B.C.

Page 9: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Organized Settlement

• Easter Island was the last of Pacific Islands to be settled.

• Evidence suggests that the settlement was well organized.– bones in middens (garbage dumps) show

animal and plant foodstuffs, not native to Easter Island

– suggests that the settlers brought these items with them in a well organized manner.

Page 10: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Isolation

• After settlement Easter Island remained isolated, and a society with roots from Micronesia, but with unique traditions arose.

• Stone tools (made out of rock unique to particular Islands) found throughout the south Pacific, suggesting trade between the Islands.– “But no stone of Easter Island has been found on any

other island or vice versa.” – This suggests that Easter Island society was

effectively isolated.

Page 11: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Thriving Population

• Evidence suggests that Easter Island had a large and rich thriving society.– Many house foundations (enough for 15-20K people)

– Agricultural Intensification (large composting pits, water dams, stone chicken houses, stone windbreaks) suggests a lot of food was needed and available.

– Society was broken into 11-12 territories or clans, not likely with a smaller population.

Page 12: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Moai and Ahu

• Easter Island has hundreds of stone platforms (ahu) that support large statues (moai).– 13-32 feet tall– 10-87 tons in weight– One basic style, but

made of different kinds of stone

Page 13: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

A statue based economy

• Constructed in 3 waves 1100 A.D.

• Statues grew larger, more elaborate, and less human-like as time went by.

• Economy centered around statue building– Many roads– Clan based niches in statue production– Food production concentrated to free up labor

for statue construction

Page 14: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Why all the statues?

• The stone on Easter Island is the best carving stone in the Pacific

• Society was isolated, so the energy expended in other Pacific societies (trading, raiding, exploration, and colonization) was directed inward

• Chiefs got stature not by inter-island interaction but by competing for status by a game of statue one-upman-ship– Later ones had a pukao, or large stone “hat”

• Clan based society, let each clan “specialize” so while each group had a monopoly on some item, trade between groups was the norm.

Page 15: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page
Page 16: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

How were they moved?

• Theorist: Thor Heyerdahl– sledge

• Theorist: Pavel Pavel– walked

• Theorist: Charles Love– upright roll

• Theorist: Jo Anne Van Tilburg– horizontal roll

• Most rely on wood and logs– http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/easter/move/past.html

Page 17: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

How were they raised?

1. Transport, Raising, and Food Production issues suggest that many trees were cut down to provide for statue production and to clear land for food production.

2. When re-discovered in the early 1700’s there were no trees on Easter Island

3. Did Deforestation lead to the collapse?

Page 18: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

An Abrupt End• Statue building, and the complex Easter Island

society ended abruptly about 1600 A.D.– Incomplete statues still embedded in quarry

• Total number of moai on Easter Island: 887• Total number of maoi that were successfully transported to

their final ahu locations: 288 (32% of 887)• Total number of moai still in the Rano Raraku quarry: 397

(45%)• Total number of moai lying 'in transit' outside of the Rano

Raraku quarry: 92 (10%)

– Stone carving tools left to lie– Chicken houses abandoned– Roads left in disrepair

• What happened?

Page 19: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Collapse• Forests Gone

– No trees on island when discovered by Europeans– Pollen analysis shows that indigenous palm trees were grown in

the time of early settlers– large areas given over to food production (upland farms)

• Food supply limited– upland farms abandoned– midden analysis shows large game birds disappeared– Large fish, porpoise, and seal bones also disappeared (no trees,

no canoes, no deep water fishing)• Fuel supply limited

– carbon tested early fires were trees, later fires were grasses• Erosion

– soil eroded from base of statues, • Unrest

– In the last days statues of rival clans were torn down, cannabilism

Page 20: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

5 point framework analysis

1. Damage to the environment• definitely yes

2. Climate change• a precipitating event that tipped the scales?

3. Hostile neighbors • no, isolation

4. Decreased support by friendly neighbors • no, isolation and no signs of trade

5. The society’s responses to its own problems • status instead of survival?

Page 21: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Criticisms of Diamond’s Version

• Rats, not men, to blame for death of Easter Island

• And Europeans• How Moai were moved: they walked

– Less people needed; less lumber needed– http://www.tegakinet.jp/moai.htm

• Stories of warfare and toppling statues exaggerated

• Focus on Moai a good distraction that kept islanders living within their means

Page 22: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Presenting a chapter

• Background– Where is it? (geography)– History – Context of society (how was it organized)– Interactions with other societies– What was it like at its peak?

• What happened– broad picture– precipitating events– are there competing theories?

• Diamond five point analysis– critiques or other views

Page 23: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Details

• Use graphs, pictures, visuals– include source below pictures/graphics if available

• Give evidence (support your claims)– results of experiments– observations– facts and figures

• Go beyond the chapter– research– ideas of others

• Tell a coherent story

Page 24: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Presentation Guidelines• A presentation is a tool that helps you explain to others

what you have done. – Most information is in your verbal comments. The slides gives

you something to refer to, and reminds you of important points.

• Keep visuals simple and uncluttered– Restrict text to 4-8 lines per page (unlike this slide!).

– Use color and font changes to carry a message (e.g. related concepts or experimental results in the same colors), not arbitrarily and not too many.

– Use LARGE fonts.

• Use graphics rather than words on slides where possible.

• Putting keywords/ideas on slide not only helps audience, but can help you remember presentation points.

Page 25: Sustainability Freshman Inquiry March 1, 2011 Jeff Fletcher See also: Daily Log PageDaily Log Page

Diamond TED Talk on Collapse

• http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/jared_diamond_on_why_societies_collapse.html (18:18)