Environmental Science Department, Wageningen University, 6700 AA Wageningen, The Netherlands;
Environmental Science Department, Wageningen University, 6700 AA Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 May 4;118(18). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2024397118.
Climate extremes are thought to have triggered large-scale transformations of various ancient societies, but they rarely seem to be the sole cause. It has been hypothesized that slow internal developments often made societies less resilient over time, setting them up for collapse. Here, we provide quantitative evidence for this idea. We use annual-resolution time series of building activity to demonstrate that repeated dramatic transformations of Pueblo cultures in the pre-Hispanic US Southwest were preceded by signals of critical slowing down, a dynamic hallmark of fragility. Declining stability of the status quo is consistent with archaeological evidence for increasing violence and in some cases, increasing wealth inequality toward the end of these periods. Our work thus supports the view that the cumulative impact of gradual processes may make societies more vulnerable through time, elevating the likelihood that a perturbation will trigger a large-scale transformation that includes radically rejecting the status quo and seeking alternative pathways.
气候变化被认为引发了各种古代社会的大规模转型,但它们似乎很少是唯一的原因。有人假设,随着时间的推移,缓慢的内部发展往往会使社会的适应能力降低,从而导致社会崩溃。在这里,我们提供了这一观点的定量证据。我们使用史前美国西南部普韦布洛文化的年度分辨率建筑活动时间序列来证明,在这些剧烈的转型之前,存在着关键减速的信号,这是脆弱性的动态标志。现状稳定性的下降与考古证据一致,这些证据表明在这些时期接近尾声时,暴力事件有所增加,在某些情况下,财富不平等程度也有所增加。因此,我们的工作支持这样一种观点,即渐进过程的累积影响可能会使社会随着时间的推移变得更加脆弱,从而增加了一个小的干扰会引发大规模转型的可能性,包括彻底拒绝现状和寻求替代途径。