In the two million years it is believed that humans have populated the Earth, they have displayed the remarkable ability to adapt to any environment. Archaeological evidence has proven that the earliest humans were able to occupy and control every terrestrial ecosystem on the planet. Human impact on the environment has increased progressively through time from the earliest hominid hunters to modern city-dwellers. A fundamental expression of early humanities ability to control the environment occurred during the birth of agriculture. While the ecological impact from this feat has allowed humanity increased control over its environment, the earliest hominids were able to survive nearly two million years without this invention. Although the interaction between humans and their habitat before the rise of agriculture may be subtle, this era beginning at the inception of the human race is no less important to the history of human environmental impact.
It is believed that the most primitive ancestor of modern humans were Homo
erectus. "The distinguishing characteristic of Homo erectus
is a large brain size of about 1,000cc (about three-quarters of modern human
capacity).1 "With the beginning of this species
may well have come the limb proportions (short arms, long legs) that characterized
modern humans."2 Scientists have concluded that
Homo erectus originated during the early Pleistocene era (representing
the last two million years) and were the only hominid species to survive this
period of time. Eventually Homo erectus evolved into Homo sapiens,
and finally into modern humans (Homo sapiens sapiens). These early
humans originally lived in small groups that were spread throughout a myriad
of habitats in Africa.
These early hominids sustained themselves through the oldest and simplest
human mode of production, hunting and gathering. They mainly "gathered
nuts, seeds and plants, which they would have supplemented by scavenging dead
animals killed by other predators and perhaps the hunting of a few small mammals."3
A wide variety of food was available and provided a sufficiently nutritional
diet. This form of economy was often far from meager and likely represents
the original affluent society since scientists speculate that a large amount
of leisure time was available. Hunting and gathering provided a very stable
and long lasting livelihood described as simple and communal.
An important trait to the development and spread of human societies as well
as their ability to interact with their surroundings was "the adoption
of technological means to overcome difficulties imposed by hostile environments."4
Stone tools, wooden spears, bolas stones, wood, skins, and fire allowed these
groups to adopted a mobile existence and move into harsher ecosystems. Technology
was particularly important in increasing humans' ability to hunt. Specifically,
the bow and arrow along with snares, traps, and nets made hunting less time
consuming and more effective. Inevitably, hunting and gathering "groups
had, over hundreds of thousands of years, adapted to every possible environment
in the world from the semi-tropical areas of Africa to ice-age Europe, from
the Arctic to the deserts of south-west Africa."5
Throughout their travels, these groups continually effected the environment
around them. Often these hunter-gatherers interfered with wild vegetation
for the purpose of promoting the growth of a particular plant by sowing its
seeds. They also uprooted and destroyed flora deemed undesirable. These types
of environmental modification were frequently aided by the use of fire. Aside
from the ability to clear large areas of land, fire was favored because of
its ability to increase nutrient cycles in the soil.
However, the major impact humans had on the environment came through hunting.
With their technological advancements, hunter-gatherers were able to over-hunt
many species. Many of these groups concentrated their hunting to a particular
species that often lead to its extinction. Humans were responsible for the
disappearance of many large flightless birds and other megafaunal animals
on every continent. Even in areas that were unaffected by the constantly shifting
climates such as Australia over the last 100,000 years, "destroying habitats
or killing the smaller herbivores on which the carnivores depended could easily
lead to extinction."6 The destruction of these
animals resulted in many long-lasting effects.
Early humans were the only species on the planet that was able to inhabit
and dominate every type of environment they populated. Relying on a mobile
hunter-gatherer existence, they managed to cause significant alterations to
their habitat. Even subtle modifications to the environment lead to considerable
repercussions. Even though humanities relationship with nature was undeniably
changed by the adoption of agriculture, early humans still found numerous
methods to affect their ecosystems during the two million years before they
learned to domesticate plants.
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last updated 2/6/03
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