One reason that Eurasian civilizations dominated the globe is because
they came from a continent that was broader in an east–west direction
than north–south, claimed geographer Jared Diamond in his famous 1997
book Guns, Germs and Steel. Now, a modelling study has found evidence to support this 'continental axis theory'.
Continents that span narrower bands of latitude have less
variation in climate, which means a set of plants and animals that are
adapted to more similar conditions. That is an advantage, says Diamond,
because it means that agricultural innovations are able to diffuse more
easily, with culture and ideas following suit. As a result, Diamond's
hypothesis predicts, along lines of latitude there will be more cultural
homogeneity than along lines of longitude.
To test that prediction, researchers at Stanford
University in California used language persistence as a proxy for
cultural diversity, and analysed the percentage of historically
indigenous languages that remain in use in 147 countries today relative
to their shape. For example, the team looked at the difference between
Chile, which has a long north–south axis, and Turkey, which has a wider
axis running east to west.
The researchers found that if a country had a greater
east–west axis than a north–south one, the less likely it was for its
indigenous languages to persist. The relationship isn't straightforward,
but the model suggests that Mongolia, which is about twice as wide as
it is tall, would have 5% fewer indigenous languages than Angola, which
is roughly square. Meanwhile, Peru — about twice as tall as it is wide —
would be predicted to have 5% more persistent languages than Angola.
The result, say the authors, supports Diamond's theory because it
indicates that east–west countries have more homogeneous cultures.
Diverse findings
“It is a significant relationship that is an observable
implication of the Diamond thesis,” says political scientist David
Laitin, who led the work. The results are published online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Greater cultural diversity is also known to be associated with outcomes
such as lower levels of economic growth and higher probabilities of
violence, he adds.
Although previous research has shown that historical
empires were more likely to have expanded farther in the east–west
direction than north–south,
tests of Diamond's idea have been limited because of the small number
of continents. Raising the sample size by using countries allows a
better claim to statistical significance. Using language persistence as a
proxy for cultural diversity is controversial, admits Laitin, but he
argues that it is the best quantifiable way.
The work by Laitin and his colleagues includes controls
for factors such as the distance of a country from the Equator
(historically, more languages have existed closer to the Equator); how
many mountains a country contains (because they can hinder the spread of
language); and the country's age (newer countries could have more
languages because there has been less time for homogenization).
Laitin also dismisses the possibility that the observed
effect could have resulted from east–west countries being more
interested in state building — more likely, for example, to introduce
policies to bring about a single national language. When Laitin and his
team repeated the analysis in 538 artificially created countries (which
they derived by combining each real country with its neighbours), the
results showed that the relationship still held up.
Thomas Currie, an expert in human evolutionary ecology at University
College London, says that the study is a novel way of testing Diamond's
hypothesis, and adds that it does a “thorough job” of controlling for a
number of alternative explanations. “The main result seems to be robust.
[The study] further supports the idea that human history and cultural
evolution are governed by general ecological and biogeographical rules,”
he says.
But others who are sceptical of the continental axis
theory say that the study does little or nothing to strengthen its case.
Language is a poor proxy for something as all-encompassing as culture,
says John McNeill, a historian at Georgetown University in Washington
DC. Many countries are either so small that the axis-length component of
cultural diversity is negligible, or they are so close to square or
round that it is hard to imagine a little extra length in one direction
or another making much difference. “Unfortunately there aren't many
countries shaped like Chile,” he says.
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