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The food crisis in prehistory: Overpopulation and the origins of agriculture Hardcover – January 1, 1977

5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 4 ratings

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An anthropological study of the origins of agriculture in both the Old World and the New World, based upon archeological findings.
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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Yale University Press; First Edition (January 1, 1977)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 320 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0300020163
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0300020168
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.38 pounds
  • Customer Reviews:
    5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 4 ratings

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Mark Nathan Cohen
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Reviewed in the United States on December 24, 2016
This book arrived within the 2 day Prime window. The text arrived exactly as expected.
Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2015
As presented with timely delivery.
Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2004
This is one of those very rare, very valuable books which (like the "Origin of Species") takes a broad worldwide view of prehistory and whilst maintaining the highest scholarly standards, seeks to draw general conclusions which will stand up to scientific scrutiny. As the author remarks in his preface "it is currently fashionable in our science to place heavy emphasis on the uniqueness of local events" whilst the broader view "tends to be frowned upon". Darwin would not have frowned and neither should we.
Cohen's book might have been called "The Origin of Agriculture". Ever since we all became aware that agriculture is a comparatively recent phenomenon in human history, those interested in the subject have puzzled their minds over why mankind abandoned the free and easy life of a hunter-gatherer for the laborious and monotonous existence of the peasant. And why did this change take place more or less simultaneously in several different parts of the world? Cohen's solution to this problem is immediately convincing and was a revelation to me. It happened because over-population caused a worldwide shortage of food. Every part of the habitable and accessible world had been colonised. There was no further room for mankind to expand into. There was an urgent need to devise some method by which a given area of land could support a greater number of people. And so, in Cohen's words "populations throughout the world... were forced to adjust to further increases in population by artificially increasing, not those resources which they preferred to eat, but those which responded well to human attention and could be made to produce the greatest number of edible calories per unit of land."
Why did the human population expand so fast when it did? Why was there such a sudden shortage of food? This book refers to the answer, but at first reading I missed the reference and didn't draw the significant conclusion. It was because human social organization and weapons technology had suddenly made man the master of nature. Within a comparatively short period of time, human hunters had caused the extinction of a large number of major mammal species throughout the world. Whilst the slaughter was going on, there had been plenty of food for everybody and populations had expanded. Once the process of extinction was more or less complete, food became very short indeed. Here Cohen relies on another scholar who also battled desperately to gain acceptance for a blindingly obvious general conclusion - Paul S. Martin. Martin's chapter on his "Quaternary Extinctions" tells the story.
Cohen's thesis is explored in painstaking detail, with evidence drawn from every continent and from many different sources. The book is not easy to read; the style is heavily academic; but it's worth the effort. First published in 1977, it should be reprinted and more widely known.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2013
For several million years -- almost the entire human journey -- our ancestors survived by hunting and gathering. Until 10,000 years ago, everything on our menu was wild food. By 2,000 years ago, most of our food came from farms, a rapid and radical change. In his book The Food Crisis in Prehistory, archaeologist and anthropologist Mark Nathan Cohen explored two questions. Why did we switch to agriculture? Why did this shift occur, around the world, almost simultaneously?

His answer to both questions was population pressure. Our preferred foods decreased as our numbers increased. In the good old days, the preferred food for hunter-gatherers everywhere was large game. It took far less time to kill a six-ton wooly mammoth than it took to kill six tons of rabbits, rats, or snails. As long as large game was available, we were delighted to put the forks to them.

When large game became scarce, adventurous souls migrated into uninhabited regions, in search of nourishing four-legged banquets. Because we were so clever with tool making, we learned how to survive in almost any type of ecosystem, wet or dry, roasting or frozen. Eventually, we ran out of uninhabited regions, and large game became scarce everywhere. Before long, less-preferred foods began to look like a delicious alternative to starvation.

When large game was our primary preferred food, the planet's carrying capacity was maybe 15 million people, Cohen estimated. He believed that the transition to agriculture had three phases: (1) large game, (2) small game, aquatic resources, more plant foods, and (3) domesticated foods. The archaeological record in most regions generally supports this.

Climate change also played a role. As the ice ages passed, the weather warmed up, and tundra ecosystems were replaced by forests. Large tundra critters became hungry homeless ruffians, and many of them staggered toward the exit. Forest critters like aurochs, deer, and pigs were not animals that lived in vast herds. Hunting them required more effort. By and by, we zipped past Peak Large Game.

Cohen found plenty of evidence that the trend throughout the long human journey had been one of population growth, slow but fairly steady. Some societies did a good job of voluntarily limiting their numbers, and others didn't. Some surely lived in balance for multiple generations. Joseph Birdsell estimated that during the Pleistocene, 15 to 50 percent of all live births were eliminated via infanticide. Deliberate stability was better than growth-driven starvation, but stability was a slippery ideal. In an ever-changing world, stability can only be temporary.

The notion of carrying capacity sets a firm limit on how many deer an ecosystem can support. For humans, carrying capacity limits were more flexible, because we could digest a wide variety of plant and animal parts. When rhinoceros steaks were no longer available, we began eating more plant foods, smaller game, marine mammals, salmon, shellfish, birds, seeds, nuts, snails, reptiles, insects, and so on. It was more work, but it kept us fed, and our numbers slowly kept growing.

This transition from a Class A diet to a Class B diet occurred in all societies, in various forms, and it increased the carrying capacity for humans. You can guess what happened next. We eventually thumped against the ceiling once again, despite our new high-tech nets, bows and arrows, traps, weirs, fishhooks, harpoons, and so on. What now? Our options included die-off, bloody conflict, effective family planning, and/or a Class C diet.

Fate tossed the dice, and a crap diet won. Agriculture was not a brilliant discovery. A million years ago, everyone knew what happened when seeds were planted. Everyone knew that tending plants was laborious. In a world of abundant animal food, most plant foods were held in low regard. "People worldwide eat meat and various fruits when they can, and eat cereals and tubers only when they must," said Cohen. A cereal-based diet had many nutritional drawbacks, and nothing was more excruciatingly dull than a diet that majors in hot porridge.

We routinely fail to appreciate the elegant time-proven culture of wild foragers. They ate a wide variety of nutritious wild plants that evolution had fine-tuned to survive the various quirks of the local ecosystem. Because they weren't dependent for survival on just two or three domesticated plant foods, Bushmen could easily survive a three-year drought that hammered nearby ranchers. Foragers were healthier people, because wild foods were more nutritious, and the nomadic lifestyle discouraged disease.

Farming was backbreaking work. It required tilling, planting, weeding, and watering -- months of effort invested before the payoff, if any. The threats of drought, deluge, frost, insects, disease, fire, hail, and winds could zap a thriving crop at any time. When the grain was ripe, there was a window of opportunity for harvesting it, which sometimes only lasted a few days. If you missed it, you were doomed. The stalks had to be cut and then threshed. If the grains were not loose enough, some roasting was needed.

Storage pits or granaries had to be built, and constantly defended against assorted moochers and thugs. Before storing it, the grain had to be parched to prevent germination, and to discourage molds and fungi. Prior to cooking, grain had to be pulverized by pounding or grinding. In the New World, living on maize required even more work.

Population pressure propelled the spread of agriculture to every suitable habitat. Small societies of hunter-gatherers were helpless to oppose the growing onslaught of belligerent mobs of porridge fiends and bread heads. In recent times, we've discovered how to use soil to convert petroleum into edible food-like substances. Today we've munched our way deeply into the realm of Class D foods, loaded with highly refined carbs, oceans of empty calories.

We've succeeded in temporarily stretching our carrying capacity to 7 billion, but little stretch remains before the inevitable snapback. Even ghastly Class D foods will slam into firm limits -- Peak Cheap Energy, Peak Fertilizer, cropland destruction, desertification, and the certainty that industrial agriculture has an expiration date. Somewhere down the road, climate change is likely to eliminate most or all forms of farming. The unusually stable climate of the last 10,000 years is a freak.

Observing the human journey from Cohen's mountaintop, we can see above the fog of myths, and the big picture comes into better focus. Even the hunter-gatherer way of life, as it occurred, was not sustainable over the long run. If we had remained in balance, agriculture and civilization would have never happened. Human efforts at voluntarily limiting population have not been 100 percent effective, and this failure has been amplified by our skills at neutralizing the traditional man-eating predators that provided essential mob control. A herd of seven billion is a time bomb.

On a misty morning, a group of chimps sits at the edge of the forest, gazing at us. They are our closest relatives, and for millions of years they have not blundered into tool addiction, domestication, or population explosions. Predators are always free to invite the less alert to lunch. Wild chimps are still healthy, happy, and sustainable. They wonder how we became so lost and confused. It's never pleasant to watch old friends self-destruct from devastating addictions. What happened? Was it necessary to trash the planet? Please! Get a grip! We miss you! Come home!

Humankind is suffocating in toxic myths. Critical thinking is a powerful antidote, and it's a vast, barely explored continent. In the coming decades, one way or another, the lights will be going out on civilization, as we know it. In the time remaining, it would be wise to bury as many of these myths as possible, so that they will not poison the minds of future generations, if any. It's time for learning, thinking, and remembering. We have many dragons to slay before we can recover our long-lost treasure, a reality-based understanding of where we came from, and who we truly are. Our greatest need is for healthy new visions. It's time to go home.

Richard Adrian Reese
Author of Sustainable or Bust
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