The Little Ice Age

855 Words2 Pages

Tiz Mullins
Brooke
History 2700
1 July 2015
Quiz III Final
#6. How could you argue that the Little Ice Age influenced the fate of humanity since the 16th century [1500s]?
Little Ice Age, Big Problem The Little Ice Age was a period of cooling following the unusually warmth of the Medieval Climate anomaly. Officially the first formal phase of the Little Ice Age began in 1400, but its origins and the transitional period leading up to it begin as early as 1150. No one thing caused the Little Ice Age. Rather it was a combination of oceanic and atmospheric circulation, volcanic activity, and solar variability interacting with each other. Precisley how everything fit together is still a subject of hot debate amongst climate scientists. (CC 380-384) …show more content…

This combination caused crops to suffer and food scarcities to become prevalent.. This put people from the New World at an extreme disadvantage when they encountered the European explorers. When Cortes arrived in Mexico in 1519, Northern mexico was suffering the effects of a twenty year drought; not the first of its kind. Incursions by both the Spanish and English in Virginia also occurred in 1570, 1585, and 1607 during three horrible droughts. Shortage of food and supplies lead to increased conflict and violence. The American mega-drought of the sixteenth-century may also be in part to blame for the hemorrhagic cocoliztli fevers that ravaged Mexico in the sixteenth-century. Between 1545 and the 1570s, the fevers killed fifteen million Mexicans. Similar Little Ice Age droughts also drastically affected the monsoons of China and India. The Ming Drought of the 1630 through the 1640s had a hand in helping to end China's Ming …show more content…

This brought more droughts, crop failures and famine lasting from the 1640s to the 1680s. Famine forced people to enter into temporary slavery under better off families. The slave trade had already been established in West Africa by 1510, and between 1519 and 1650 3,500 slaves were transported per year to the Americas, the Islamic World, and other regions in Africa. When the full effects of the droughts hit in 1650, that number was tripled. It was then doubled again in 1675. While these droughts did not necessarily directly cause the increase in the slave trade, they created favorable conditions for such and increase to occur. Crop failures and famine mean more stress on the population and the development of small warring states. Not to mentions a demand from the Americas for slave labour from Africa due to the mass deaths of the Native American populations due to drought and

Open Document