History Mr Woodgate

|Appendix|

Appendix 1:

population
(millions) / population
(millions) / percent decrease
Author / place / 1519 / 1595 / 1519-1595
Rosenblat / "Mexico" / 4.5 / 3.5 / 22
Aguirre-Beltrán / 4.5 / 2.0 / 56
Zambardino / 5-10 / 1.1-1.7 / 64-89
Mendizabal / 8.2 / 2.4 / 71
Cook and Simpson / 10.5 / 2.1-3.0 / 71-80
Cook and Borah / 18-30 / 1.4 / 78-95
Sanders / Central Mexican
Symbiotic Region / 2.6-3.1 / 0.4 / 85-87
Whitmore / Valley of Mexico / 1.3-2.7 / 0.1-0.4 / 69-96
Gibson / 1.5 / 0.2 / 87
Sanders / 1.0-1.2 / 0.1 / 90
Kubler / 128 towns / 0.2 / 0.1 / 50

Retrieved from:

Appendix 2:

The Columbian Exchange: Old & New World Diseases

History 2010: The U.S. to 1877, Dr. Houston

ConveyorsItem ConveyedDeathsDestination

French?
(1550s) / Pleurisy and the bloody flux / 1,000s / Tupinamba Indians of Brazil
Portuguese
(1562-1563) / Smallpox / 10s of 1,000s / Indians of Brazil
English
(1580s) / Typhus / ? / Indians of Caribbean & Florida
English Puritans
(1616/1617-1622) / Pestilence? / “heapes” / Indians of New England
Spanish
(1531) / Measles / ? / Indians of Central America
Spanish
(1518-1519) / Smallpox / 1 million (in Santo Domingo alone) / Arawak Indians of Santo Domingo
(Greater Antilles & Bahamas)
Cortez & Spanish
(1519-1530) / Smallpox / 8.2 million / Maya Indians of the Yucatan and Aztec Indians of Mexico
Spanish
(1514-1530) / Smallpox (probably also measles, pneumonia and typhus) / 2 million / Panama
Alvarado & Spanish (1520-1521) / Influenza / ? / Cakchiquel Maya Indiansof Guatemala
Pizarro and Spanish
(1520s) / Smallpox (?) / 200,000 / Inca Indians of Andes & South America
Columbus’ Crew – 1493 / Syphilis:
Millions got it; they called disease by different names (ff.) / India=Dis of Franks
Ch=Ulcer of Canton
Jp=Tang (Chn) Sore
Jpn = Portuguese dis / Called Fren, Naples,
Bordeaux, Spanish,
German, Polish, Dis
ME=Eur. Pustules

This table taken from

Appendix 3:

The Columbian Exchange:

Plants & Animals from Europe

History 2010: The U.S. to 1877, Dr. Houston

Banana

Brought in from Canary Islands in 1516

1. Thrived in tropical climes

Sugar

Sugar cane plantations

1. Provided exports:

1. By 1610 Brazil may have had 400 mills

2. Producing 57,000 tons for export to Europe

2. Demanded labor

Rice

Food staple crop: 87% carbohydrates and 13% protein

1. Probably originated in India about 10,000 B.C.

2. Archaeology proved grown in Thailand in 4,000 B.C.

3. Spread to Middle east and Africa by 400 B.C.

4. Alexander the Great (d. 323 B.C.)’s conquering army brought back to Greece

5. Brought to American colonies in the 1600s

6. India and China produce 55% of world’s crop

Wheat

Grown throughout Spanish holdings by 1600

1. Indians consistently refused to eat wheat bread

Wine Grapes

First Peruvian vintage 1551

Olives

First olive tree seedlings to Peru in 1560

1. Wheat wine and olive oil were basic to Spanish cuisine

2. Grew in irrigated valleys of Spanish Pacific coast

Pigs

Pigs, horses, and cattle arrived with Columbus 2nd visit in 1493

1. Pigs increased to 30,000 in Cuba in 1514

2. Not huge modern animal but more like a speedy wild boar

3. 13 De Soto brought to Florida 1539 were 700 3 years later!

4. Pigs came to Peru with Pizarro in 1531: mobile commissary for conquistadores

Cattle

(To Mexico in 1521)

Multiplied rapidly both domestically and in the wild

1. Islanders often lived off abandoned livestock gone wild

2. Smoked and grilled meat on a grate called a boucan

3. When turned to pirating in 17th century, called buccaneers!

4. More cattle by 17th c. than any other vertebrate immigrant

5. More killed for hides and tallow than for meat!

1. 64,350 hides exported to Spain in 1587

6. Huge herds destroyed Indian crops by trampling

Horse

Spain the most equestrian culture in Europe

1. 1501 Espanola had 20 or 30 despite high mortality at sea

2. Excellent beast of burden

3. Most valued as an instrument of war: terrified Indians!

4. Pizarro shod his horses in silver when iron was lacking!

5. Three large grasslands where horse multiplied in the wild

1. Pampas of Argentina: biological explosion

2. Llanos of Venezuela and Columbia

3. Central plains of American West stretching from central Mexico to Canada

6. Horse basic to ranches which supplied meat for miners

1. Ecological interdependence essential for industry

7. Horse revolutionized Indians’ life on the plains

1. Allowed them to hunt buffalo, etc. with “meat, hides, bones, and sinew

2. Made commercial trade possible with surplus

3. Greatest effect to fight the Europeans!

Sheep

Came with Columbus in 1493

1. More vulnerable to predators thus multiplied more slowly

2. Wool was basis of first American factories:

1. Mexican textile mills with forced Indian labor

2. 1571-New Spain had 80

4. Carried diseases that decimated llamas and alpacas

Goat

Often went wild on islands

Donkeys & Mules

Burro a popular beast of burden

1. Never as plentiful as horses

2. Large mule ranches did exist

Camels

Never popular; extinct in New World by 1615

1. Killed for food by escaped slaves

Black rat

Carrier of bubonic plague and typhus

1. Stowaway on ships coming to colonial ports

2. New to Bermuda, literally ate colonists out of house and home and almost destroyed colony

The Columbian Exchange:

Foods from the New World

Avocado

(alligator pear)

Tree fruit native to tropical America and rich in protein

Beans

Staple food crop. Many new varieties of nutritional legumes.

1. Maize, squash, & beans formed 3-fold food basis of the Meso-American civilization

2. Soybean from East single most important food variety

Chile Pepper

Source of paprika and hot seasonings, etc.

Cocoa

Beans of Cacao Tree dried, shelled, & roasted for chocolate flavor

1. Has as much as 20% protein, 40% carbohydrate, 40% fat

2. Mixed with milk to form beverage with caffeine-like effect

Guava

White or yellow fruit the size of an orange

1. Source of jellies and preserves.

Maize (corn)

Staple food crop grown for human and livestock consumption. Currently largest crop in the U.S.A.

1. Will grow in land too dry for rice and too wet for wheat

2. Valuable for its high yield per unit of land

3. Valuable for its short growing season

Manioc (cassava)

Staple food crop. Nutritional root 2 ft long and 6” in diameter

1. Chief source of tapioca (mostly starch and some vitamins)

2. Resistant to drought and pests

3. Extremely high yield in soil too poor for any other crop.

Papaya (pawpaw)

Tree fruit can weigh 20 pounds

Peanuts

Legume originated in South America

Pineapple

Fruit originated South America with 1/3 crop grown in Hawaii

Potato

Staple food crop. Starchy tuber originated in the Peruvian Andes, brought to Europe in the 16th c., then to N.A. in the 18th

1. Produces higher yield of food per unit of land than wheat or any other grain

2. Grows well in tiny plots of poor land at high altitude

Pumpkin

Gourd related to squash

Squashes

Gourd related to pumpkin with summer and winter varieties

Sweet Potato

Staple food crop is a root vegetable produced by a trailing herb.

1. High yields equal 3-4 times that of rice

2. Tolerant of poor soils and resists drought

3. Important second food crop in rice lands like Indonesia

Tomato

Fruit of a vine-like herb

1. valuable as source of minerals and vitamins A and C

2. Europeans originally believed it to be poisonous!

Appendix 3 retrieved from :

Jock Webb, 8A