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table rose Ā¹āµĀ² Epstein (2000); Patz and Reisen (2001). The alternative view advocated by Rogers and Randolph (2000) seems to totally ignore all the evidence for the existence of P. falciparum malaria in the past in southern Europe, for example.

Ā¹āµĀ³ Martinez-Cortizas et al. (1999); Reale and Dirmeyer (2000).

Ā¹āµā“ Potter (1979: 74) summarized the explosion in site numbers in south-eastern Etruria; Barker (1988); Sallares (1991: 29ā€“34) on the spread of new crops.

104

Ecology of malaria

17. The Monti

Cimini, viewed from

the site of the Roman

villa at Lugnano in

Teverina. Most of

the redoubtable

ancient forest has

now disappeared.

Ecology of malaria

105

by more than a metre over the whole territory of Metapontum from the sixth to the fourth centuries ļ¢ļ£. This was accompanied by extensive alluviation, which created marshy conditions suitable for Anopheles mosquitoes. The necropolis at Pantanello, whose very name indicates marshy conditions, outside Metapontum has yielded several skeletons which show signs of thalassaemia, an inherited genetic condition which confers a degree of resistance to P. falciparum malaria. This constitutes indirect evidence for the likely existence and activity of P. falciparum in southern Italy as well as Sicily during the classical Greek period.Ā¹āµāµ

This is not the place for an extensive discussion of deforestation in Italy in antiquity. Suffice it to say that there were massive forests in Italy, which grew during the mid-Holocene climatic optimum, following the end of the last Ice Age. Delano Smith has suggested that even the Tavoliere in Apulia, a semi-arid region today, might have been substantially covered by forest in the early Neolithic period.Ā¹āµā¶ In western central Italy, which is much better watered than the Tavoliere, the climax vegetation in the absence of human interference undoubtedly would be large forests in many areas.

Many of these forests were broken up during the first millennium ļ¢ļ£ by the demands of an increasing human population for open land for agriculture and by the ever-increasing demand of the Romans for timber. For example, Livy describes the Ciminian Forest. It was said to be so dense and forbidding c.310 ļ¢ļ£ that people were afraid even to approach it. Hardly anything is left of it today.Ā¹āµā· Pliny the Younger described the ancient woods of very tall trees on the Appennine mountains, above his estate at Tifernum in Umbria.Ā¹āµāø Theophrastus described very large forests in Latium at the end of the fourth century ļ¢ļ£.Ā¹āµā¹ These forests were well watered Ā¹āµāµ Henneberg et al. (1992: 455) on thalassaemia. Their claim to have also found evidence for treponemal diseases such as syphilis in the skeletal remains from Metapontum remains controversial. Nevertheless malaria probably played a major role in the depopulation of the territory of Metapontum in the third century ļ¢ļ£ described by Carter (1990).

Ā¹āµā¶ Delano Smith (1978: 53), cf. Caldara and Pennetta (1996).

Ā¹āµā· Livy 9.36.1ā€“8, discussed by Meiggs (1982: 246) and Cornell (1995: 355ā€“6); Pratesi and Tassi (1977: 49) described the remnants of the Ciminian Forest.

Ā¹āµāø Pliny, Ep. 5.6.7: montes summa sui parte procera nemora et antiqua habent.

Ā¹āµā¹ Theophrastus, HP 5.8.3 and 2, ed. Amigues (1993): Ɠ dā€  t0n Latā‰¤nwn Ļ€fudroƟ p$sa: kaā‰„ Ɠ mā€ n pedeinĀ¶ d3fnhn Ļ€cei kaā‰„ murrā‰¤nouƟ kaā‰„ ĆøxuĀ¶n qaumast&n: thlikaıta gĀ¤r tĀ¤ m&kh tvmnousin Āæste eā€nai dianek0Ɵ t0n Turrhnā‰¤dwn ƋpƏ tĀ¶n trƎpin: Ɠ dā€  ĆøreinĀ¶ peĀ»khn kaā‰„

ʒl3thn. tƏ dā€  Kirkaāˆon kaloĀ»menon eā€nai mā€ n Ā£kran ƋyhlĀ¶n, daseāˆan dā€  sfƎdra kaā‰„ Ļ€cein drın kaā‰„ d3fnhn pollĀ¶n kaā‰„ murrā‰¤nouƟ . . . tƏn dā€  tƎpon eā€nai kaā‰„ toıton nvan prƎsqesin kaā‰„

prƎteron mā€ n oĖ†n n[son eā€nai tƏ Kirkaāˆon, nın dā€  ƋpƏ potam0n tinwn proskec0sqai kaā‰„

106

Ecology of malaria

and had taller trees than the forests of southern Italy (although not as tall as those of Corsica). The lowland forests of bay, myrtle, and beech contained old trees tall enough to span the length of the keel of an Etruscan ship, while there were upland forests of fir and silver fir. The extant text seems confused, since beech ( Fagus silvatica, ĆøxĀ»h), which dominated the summits of the mountains of Lazio in the early modern period, belongs in the upland forests. If there were any beech forests in the lowlands of Latium c.300 ļ¢ļ£, they were relics of previous colder periods, which were doomed to extinction during the warmer climate of the Roman Empire.Ā¹ā¶ā°

Theophrastusā€™ description of the region around ancient Circeii shows that he was aware of ongoing environmental change in the form of the alluviation which was thought to have attached Circeii, regarded in antiquity as once having been an island, to the mainland of Italy. Monte Circeo is regarded by modern geologists as eā€nai ]āˆ«ĆŽna. t[Ɵ dā€  n&sou tƏ mvgeqoƟ perā‰„ Ćøgdo&konta stadā‰¤ouƟ . . . t0n gĀ¤r ʒn tāˆ« Latā‰¤n7

kal0n ginomvnwn Ƌperbolāˆ« kaā‰„ t0n ʒlatā‰¤nwn kaā‰„ t0n peukā‰¤nwnā€”meā‰¤zw gĀ¤r taıta kaā‰„

kallā‰¤w t0n āˆžItalik0n. (The whole territory of the Latins is well-watered; the plains contain forests of bay, myrtle, and wonderful beech. They fell timbers of it so long that they span the entire length of the keel of an Etruscan ship. The hills have forests of fir and silver-fir . . . The so-called Circaion is an elevated promontory, but it is densely wooded and has oak trees, a lot of bay, and myrtle. The land surrounding the Circaion has been created recently by sedimentation from certain rivers, but the Circaion was formerly an island. The island was about eighty stades in circumference . . . silver-fir and fir grow extremely tall in Latium and are taller and finer than in southern Italy.).

Ā¹ā¶ā° Quilici (1979: 76ā€“87) on the ancient forests of the Campagna Romana, cf. Pratesi and Tassi (1977: 76); Traina (1990: 16); Grandazzi (1997: 65ā€“73) on the environment of Latium.

Meiggs (1982: 219, 243ā€“5) and Fraser (1994: 184ā€“6) discussed Theophrastus on the forests of Latium without considering the problem of the beeches. The inaccuracy of Theophrastusā€™

information (if it is not simply the case that the text has become garbled during manuscript transmission) fits Fraserā€™s emphasis on the paucity of information available to Theophrastus from the western Mediterranean in contrast to the large volume of data yielded by

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