Rat Fink
Member
I'd go to the Western Front and do some hunting with a Lewis machine gun strapped to the upper wing of an S.E5.A. Dangerous work but the excitement level would be off the charts with slim chances of surviving the adventure.
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I wish I had a link, but buffalo numbers were actually pretty decimated before Europeans arrived in North America. The Native American population was booming, and the fate of the buffalo was for the most part sealed before we ever got here.
The diseases that Europeans brought sent a wave in front of their Westerly expansion that knocked native populations way back. This short window of few humans in the West created a small window where the Buffalo numbers exploded, and that's the huge numbers we hear about with the white man's buffalo slaughters.
So you're right, there probably was a huge population around when Lewis and Clark came through, but it was an artificial blip in a bigger downward decline not directly tied to white settlement.
I wish I had a link, but buffalo numbers were actually pretty decimated before Europeans arrived in North America. The Native American population was booming, and the fate of the buffalo was for the most part sealed before we ever got here.
The diseases that Europeans brought sent a wave in front of their Westerly expansion that knocked native populations way back. This short window of few humans in the West created a small window where the Buffalo numbers exploded, and that's the huge numbers we hear about with the white man's buffalo slaughters.
So you're right, there probably was a huge population around when Lewis and Clark came through, but it was an artificial blip in a bigger downward decline not directly tied to white settlement.
That is an interesting statement. If true I was not aware of that. Seems like history books told us a different version.
So you're right, there probably was a huge population around when Lewis and Clark came through, but it was an artificial blip in a bigger downward decline not directly tied to white settlement.
My last line from above-
And I'll preface that I'm just a guy who heard something that made sense. Turns out Charles C. Mann is the guy who first brought this idea out, and I'm thinking it might've been Rinella who I heard talking about it. But I've also heard him talk about other things that I know he was wrong about, so who knows. Interesting theory that makes sense.
I'd love to believe that whites didn't come out and shoot thousands of buffalo for just the hides or even just letting them lay. But most of the history books I have read indicate that was the case. I do think that there could be a correlation with the decline happening as guns were introduced as that makes sense in some ways.
This article touches on what you are saying. But also indicates the hide hunters played a role.
http://deltafarmpress.com/livestock/buffalos-decline-tragic-part-national-history
Buffalo's decline tragic part of national history
Jul 11, 2008 Wayne Capooth Contributing Writer [email protected] | Delta Farm Press
Years ago saw the practical disappearance of the buffalo as a game animal on the Great Plains. However, even before their disappearance, they had already been decimated around the Mid-South. It occurred at such an early date that there is not much recorded history regarding the decline of buffaloes in the Mid-South.
At one time, buffalo grazed, wallowed and roamed over all the states covered by the readers of Delta Farm Press.
Attempts were made to estimate the number of buffalo that roamed North America before the coming of the white man. Such estimates, of course, are little better than guesses, but they are not uninstructive.
One authority estimated that not less than 40 million buffaloes lived on the plains, 30 million on the prairies (including the prairies of Arkansas, Louisiana, western Tennessee and Mississippi), and 5 million in the forest regions — a total of 75 million.
Others placed the total number at between 50 million and 60 million; and still others believed that the number must have been at least 125 million.
The ancient range of the buffalo was from the Atlantic seaboard west to the deserts of central Nevada, and from Texas and the Gulf States north to Great Slave Lake.
The Spanish were the first Western explorers to see and describe them.
Tales told by pioneers concerning the immense numbers of buffalo seen on the plains were a severe tax upon one's powers of belief. A Col. Dodge described a herd 50 miles wide that required five days to pass a given point. Gen. Phil Sheridan (1831-1888) traveled for 120 miles through a continuous herd, packed so densely that the earth was black, and the train was compelled to stop several times.
The next spring a train on the same track was delayed at a point between Fort Marker and Fort Hayes, Kans., for eight hours, while an immense herd crossed the track. “As far as the vision could carry, the level prairie was black with the surging mass of affrighted buffaloes rushing onward to the south.”
With buffaloes existing on the plains in such incredible numbers in the 1860s, their utter disappearance from the southern plains in the 1870s, and from the more northern region in the early 1880s, was truly an amazing circumstance. It was due in the main to the activities of the hide hunters who left their trail of desiccating carcasses and bleaching bones throughout the whole vast region roamed by the buffalo millions.
Before the coming of the white man, the increase in the numbers of buffalo was limited by the Indians and wolves and other breast of prey. Tens of thousands also drowned annually when the herds forded rivers.
However, as soon as the Indians acquired firearms and horses, the animals were killed off more rapidly than their numbers were replenished by natural increase, and white hunters and settlers ably abetted the work of destruction.
In the decade from 1850 to 1860, it is estimated that the Indians alone were killing 3.5 million buffaloes each year. In 1883, Sitting Bull and his band, with some white hunters, killed the last 10 thousand of the northern herd.
After the hide hunters followed the bone collectors. Buffalo bones were strewn over the plains in incredible quantities, and these were gathered up for utilization in carbon works, mostly in St. Louis. It took one hundred buffalo skeletons to weigh a ton. The price per ton averaged $8. In thirteen years, in Kansas alone, $2.5 million was paid for buffalo bones, representing the skeletons of more than 31 million buffaloes.
Civilization was incompatible with such a large animal, so the tale of the passing of the buffalo is a tragic and depressing one.
I'd love to believe that whites didn't come out and shoot thousands of buffalo for just the hides or even just letting them lay.
That's not even what he said. Go back and read the posts.