Smart agricultural practices and an extensive grain-trade network
enabled the Romans to thrive in the water-limited environment of the
Mediterranean, a new study shows. But the stable food supply brought
about by these measures promoted population growth and urbanisation,
pushing the Empire closer to the limits of its food resources. The
research, by an international team of hydrologists and Roman historians,
is published today in Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, an open access journal of the European Geosciences Union (EGU).
Stretching over three continents and persisting for many centuries,
the Roman Empire was home to an estimated 70 million people. In such a
vast area ensuring a stable food supply was no easy task, particularly
given the variable and arid climate of the Mediterranean region. So how
did the Romans maintain reliable food supplies to their cities for
centuries under such challenging conditions?
To find out, Brian Dermody, an environmental scientist from Utrecht
University, teamed up with hydrologists from the Netherlands and
classicists at Stanford University in the US. The researchers wanted to
know how the way Romans managed water for agriculture and traded crops
contributed to the longevity of their civilisation. They were also
curious to find out if these practices played a role in the eventual
fall of the Empire.
"We can learn much from investigating how past societies dealt with
changes in their environment," says Dermody. He draws parallels between
the Roman civilisation and our own. "For example, the Romans were
confronted with managing their water resources in the face of population
growth and urbanisation. To ensure the continued growth and stability
of their civilisation, they had to guarantee a stable food supply to
their cities, many located in water-poor regions."
In the Hydrology and Earth System Sciences paper, the team focused on
determining the water resources required to grow grain, the staple crop
of the Roman civilisation, and how these resources were distributed
within the Empire. It takes between 1000 and 2000 litres of water to
grow one kilo of grain. As Romans traded this crop, they also traded the
water needed to produce it - they exchanged virtual water.
The researchers created a virtual water network of the Roman world.
"We simulated virtual water trade based on virtual-water-poor regions
(urban centres, such as Rome) demanding grain from the nearest
virtual-water-rich region (agricultural regions, such as the Nile basin)
in the network," explains Dermody.
The team used a hydrological model to calculate grain yields, which
vary depending on factors such as climate and soil type. The authors
used reconstructed maps of the Roman landscape and population to
estimate where agricultural production and food demand were greatest.
They also simulated the trade in grain based on an interactive
reconstruction of the Roman transport network, which takes into account
the cost of transport depending on factors such as distance and means of
transportation.
Their virtual water network indicates that the Romans' ability to
link the different environments of the Mediterranean through trade
allowed their civilisation to thrive. "If grain yields were low in a
certain region, they could import grain from a different part of the
Mediterranean that experienced a surplus. That made them highly
resilient to short-term climate variability," says Dermody.
But the Romans' innovative water-management practices may also have
contributed to their downfall. With trade and irrigation ensuring a
stable food supply to cities, populations grew and urbanisation
intensified. With more mouths to feed in urban centres, the Romans
became even more dependent on trade whilst at the same time the Empire
was pushed closer to the limits of their easily accessible food
resources. In the long term, these factors eroded their resilience to
poor grain yields arising from climate variability.
"We're confronted with a very similar scenario today. Virtual water
trade has enabled rapid population growth and urbanisation since the
beginning of the industrial revolution. However, as we move closer to
the limits of the planet's resources, our vulnerability to poor yields
arising from climate change increases," concludes Dermody.
No comments:
Post a Comment