Freeman Jacob, Robinson Erick, Bird Darcy, Hard Robert J, Mauldin Raymond P, Anderies John M
Anthropology Program, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84321.
The Ecology Center, Utah State University, Logan, UT 84321.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 Mar 19;121(12):e2312207121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2312207121. Epub 2024 Mar 11.
Over the last 12,000 y, human populations have expanded and transformed critical earth systems. Yet, a key unresolved question in the environmental and social sciences remains: Why did human populations grow and, sometimes, decline in the first place? Our research builds on 20 y of archaeological research studying the deep time dynamics of human populations to propose an explanation for the long-term growth and stability of human populations. Innovations in the productive capacity of populations fuels exponential-like growth over thousands of years; however, innovations saturate over time and, often, may leave populations vulnerable to large recessions in their well-being and population density. Empirically, we find a trade-off between changes in land use that increase the production and consumption of carbohydrates, driving repeated waves of population growth over thousands of years, and the susceptibility of populations to large recessions due to a lag in the impact of humans on resources. These results shed light on the long-term drivers of human population growth and decline.
在过去的12000年里,人类人口不断增长并改变了关键的地球系统。然而,环境科学和社会科学中一个关键的未解决问题仍然存在:人类人口最初为何增长,有时又为何减少?我们的研究建立在20年考古研究的基础上,该研究探讨了人类人口的长期动态,以对人类人口的长期增长和稳定性提出一种解释。人口生产能力的创新推动了数千年呈指数级的增长;然而,创新会随着时间的推移而饱和,而且往往会使人口容易受到福祉和人口密度大幅衰退的影响。从经验上看,我们发现在土地利用变化之间存在一种权衡,这种变化增加了碳水化合物的生产和消费,推动了数千年来人口的反复增长浪潮,以及由于人类对资源的影响存在滞后,人口容易受到大幅衰退的影响。这些结果揭示了人类人口增长和下降的长期驱动因素。