A new study has called in to question conventional theories about the disappearance of the islanders.
A small land mass of only 60 square miles, Easter Island has remained
something of an enigma for years. Its army of strange stone heads and
the unexplained disappearance of its inhabitants are mysteries that
continue to draw both intrigue and puzzlement.
For a long time it
was thought that the people of Easter Island had been in steady decline
long before Europeans arrived there in 1722 and that their overuse of
the island's natural resources had been the biggest contributing factor
in their eventual demise.
Now however researchers have published a
new paper providing evidence that the depletion of resources was
unlikely to have been the cause of the islanders' disappearance.
The
study, which was led by Christopher M. Stevenson of Virginia
Commonwealth University, suggests that while the inhabitants did see a
slight reduction in numbers prior to European contact it was not likely
to have been indicative of mass starvation and population collapse.
Instead
it appears to have been contact with the Europeans, who brought
diseases such as smallpox and syphilis, that was almost entirely
responsible for their eventual disappearance.
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