From the University of California – Davis and the “seek and ye shall find” department, a stunning example of Tabloid Climatology™ trying to link “extreme weather” with the Mayan civilization collapse. They did get one thing right though with this quote:
“We are dependent on climatological events that are beyond our control.”
As usual with bad press releases like this, they don’t name the paper, just the claims and the silly headline. (See update below for the paper) It is funny how a naturally occurring drought gets morphed into the “extreme weather” meme of the current news cycle.
Extreme weather preceded collapse of Maya civilization
Decades of extreme weather crippled, and ultimately decimated, first the political culture and later the human population of the ancient Maya, according to a new study by an interdisciplinary team of researchers that includes two University of California, Davis, scientists.
The collapse of the Maya is one of the world’s most enduring mysteries. Now, for the first time, researchers have combined a precise climatic record of the Maya environment with a precise record of Maya political history to provide a better understanding of the role weather had in the civilization’s downfall.
Their findings are published in the Nov. 9, 2012 issue of the journal Science.
“Here you had an amazing state-level society that had created calendars, magnificent architecture, works of art, and was engaged in trade throughout Central America,” said UC Davis anthropology professor and co-author Bruce Winterhalder. “They were incredible craftspersons, proficient in agriculture, statesmanship and warfare—and within about 80 years, it fell completely apart.”
To determine what was happening in the sociopolitical realm during each of those years, the study tapped the extensive Maya Hieroglyphic Database Project, run by UC Davis Native American Language Center director and linguist Martha Macri, a specialist in Mayan hieroglyphs who has been tracking the culture’s stone monuments for nearly 30 years.
“Every one of these Maya monuments is political history,” said Macri.
Inscribed on each monument is the date it was erected and dates of significant events, such as a ruler’s birthday or accession to power, as well as dates of some deaths, burials and major battles. The researchers noted that the number of monuments carved decreased in the years leading to the collapse.
But the monuments made no mention of ecological events, such as storms, drought or references to crop successes or failures.
For that information, the research team collected a stalagmite from a cave in Belize, less than 1 mile from the Maya site of Uxbenka and about 18 miles from three other important centers. Using oxygen isotope dating in 0.1 millimeter increments along the length of the stalagmite, the scientists uncovered a physical record of rainfall over the past 2,000 years.
Combined, the stalagmite and hieroglyphs allowed the researchers to link precipitation to politics. Periods of high and increasing rainfall coincided with a rise in population and political centers between 300 and 660 AD. A climate reversal and drying trend between 660 and 1000 AD triggered political competition, increased warfare, overall sociopolitical instability, and finally, political collapse. This was followed by an extended drought between 1020 and 1100 AD that likely corresponded with crop failures, death, famine, migration and, ultimately, the collapse of the Maya population.
“It has long been suspected that weather events can cause a lot of political unrest and subject societies to disease and invasion,” Macri said. “But now it’s clear. There is physical evidence that correlates right along with it. We are dependent on climatological events that are beyond our control.”
Said Winterhalder: “It’s a cautionary tale about how fragile our political structure might be. Are we in danger the same way the Classic Maya were in danger? I don’t know. But I suspect that just before their rapid descent and disappearance, Maya political elites were quite confident about their achievements.”
Co-authors leading the study are Douglas Kennett of Pennsylvania State University and Sebastian Breitenbach of Eidgenossische Technische Hochschule in Switzerland. The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, the European Research Council and Alphawood Foundation.
UPDATE: Abstract and link to paper here
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/338/6108/788
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rgb at Duke: Because we build the entire Eastern Seaboard as if hurricanes of that strength never happen there!
Cheeze. How dumb can you get?
Good essay. About that quote, right now there are people advocating that we spend many resources reducing CO2 emissions instead of preparing for the next hurricanes, droughts, fires etc. This even though the natural disasters will recur even if we can reduce by targeted amounts, and even if that “works” to halt the warming. I am not sure “how dumb” people can be, but I bet that Mayor Bloomberg even now thinks that trans fats and soda pop restrictions are more important than preparing New York City for the next storm. I don’t know him, this is a kind of guess. Let’s see where he devotes his attention and the city’s resources through the remainder of his term.
Steve Keohane says:
November 9, 2012 at 6:38 am
Yes, but that’s okay. Replicating results increases confidence in the hypothesis.
It’s just that it’s not major news any more.
“They were incredible craftspersons…” A new wordification for me, but like ‘spokesperson,’ ‘chair,’ etc. –conceived in ignorance and born in stupidity. It is the same originally neuter element ‘man’ that shows up in ‘woman,’ that is, the ‘wiffman,’ or the man who was wife. The science behind these neologisms has much in common with GW science–there is none.
–AGF
Don’t mind me, but I read that changes in rain fall and droughts triggered the Maya collapse at least 10 years ago. As an aside, apparently a group of Mayans migrated northward and finished off the Anasazi culture shortly afterward. Signs of cannibalism and changes in fortifications built by the Anasazi appear at the same time, shortly before the whole area was abandoned around 1300 AD.
ferocious20022002 says:
November 9, 2012 at 3:56 pm
You are correct. I was just going to add that fact about the Anasazi..
In the Dresden Codex, IIRC, the 2012 date is signified by jugs of water pouring from the sky.
The Maya did predict a lot of things, and one they predicted was that in 2012 the grand cycle would turn (not the end of the world, though) and it would be accompanied by massive rains.
As we’ve started having rainfall ramp up all over (during the solar funk / cooling cycle swap) I suspect “they were onto something”. These folks studied more astronomy and cycles than even modern folks do. I think they worked it out some time back how cyclical weather happens, even very long cycle weather. Too bad the Spaniards burned all their books…
BTW, there was also a “Mega drought” in California. Some of our lakes have full sized tree stumps on the bottom. The droughts lasted long enough for the lake to dry out and trees to grow to maturity at the bottom. Then the rains returned… About the same time, too, IIRC.
I’ve also found a pattern where, when it is colder, some places get less rain and others get more. In particular, California had a drought in the ’70s (after a period of high snowfall in the ’50s). We seem to get lots of snow on a ‘warm to cold’ transition, then drought toward the end of the cold phase when we go into a ‘cold to warm’ transition. To the extent that holds, we ought to be lots of snow for a couple of years and then a very bad drought as this cycle turns from hot to very cold.
Oh, and Utah too. Back around the ’50s the Great Salt Lake had flooding from lots of rain, then the rains slacked off a lot as the cool phase settled in. About ’56 I think… So I’d expect that pattern to repeat in Utah too (though they added pumps and stuff to prevent more flooding… just in time for drought to leave them unused for decades…. so a repeat minus the floods.)
THE key takeaway from that paper OUGHT to be that there are strong and long natural weather cycles and we ought to be preparing for them. Forget the CO2, it is not relevant. It’s the natural cycles that’s a problem…
It also appears that the Old Kingdom in Egypt was destroyed by a drought that greatly reduced or completely stopped the flow of the Nile about 4200 years. There is evidence that a worldwide, short-lived, period of very cold temperatures. A Text have been found, which describes a massive famine punctuated by unspeakable horrors occurring along the Nile at the time.
Ancient Apocalypse Death on the Nile
“Published on Apr 24, 2012 by English Video”
10 likes, 0 dislikes; 1,856 Views; 48:59 min
BBC Series
“Professor Fekri Hassan attempts to determine why the Egyptian Old Kingdom, the civilisation of the great pyramids, collapsed around 2200 BC. Can science show that terrible forces of nature were to blame – even driving people to cannibalism? Clues come from the remote deserts of southern Egypt, the glaciers of Iceland and a dramatic and unique archaeological find in the Nile delta.”
Ric Werme says:November 9, 2012 at 10:35 am
Steve Keohane says:
November 9, 2012 at 6:38 am
Reading upstream I see I am not alone in seeing the lack of new information being resented. Matt says:November 8, 2012 at 10:47 pm and Tim Ball says:November 8, 2012 at 2:37 pm [and Ric Werme says: November 9, 2012 at 5:58 am]
Yes, but that’s okay. Replicating results increases confidence in the hypothesis.
It’s just that it’s not major news any more.
I know, but I heard this at least 30-40 year ago.