What killed all the bison? - Andrew C. Isenberg

281,230 views ・ 2023-11-21

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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It was 1861, and Lone Bear was leading Eagle Plume on his first-ever hunt.
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He paused and told Eagle Plume the rules:
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once he saw the bison herd, he needed to wait until someone older signaled;
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and when it came time, to kill only what his horse could carry.
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Lone Bear advanced, then beckoned, and suddenly they were off.
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Eagle Plume and Lone Bear were Kiowa,
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which was one of several Indigenous groups that lived on the Great Plains.
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By the mid-1700s, many Plains nations were using horses
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to hunt the area’s plentiful bison, North America’s largest land mammals.
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They survived on bison meat,
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made the bison’s summer hides into lodges, and winter coats into blankets,
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and used bison bones and horns for tools and sinew as thread.
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01:00
But in the decades to come, millions of bison will be slaughtered,
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and the Plains societies’ survival and cultures fundamentally—
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and deliberately— threatened.
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After the American Civil War,
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thousands of US settlers began occupying the Plains,
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intent on exploiting its natural resources.
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During the 1860s, Plains nations pushed back against the US military.
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William Sherman resented the army’s defeats.
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His ruthless military tactics had recently helped end the American Civil War.
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And, in 1869, he was appointed the US Army’s Commanding General.
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Now, his focus was on what he called “the Indian problem.”
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US government officials were determined to force Native American people
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into designated areas they called reservations.
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This way, they could control Indigenous people
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while US settlers and companies profited off their land.
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Sherman pledged to stay out west, in his words,
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“till the Indians are all killed or taken to a country where they can be watched.”
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Meanwhile, the demand for leather,
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like the kind used for belting to connect industrial machinery, boomed.
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To meet the demand, US hunters armed with rifles
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killed bison all across the Plains.
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Sherman and other military officials
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realized they could meet their goal passively,
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by letting this lurching industrial economy run unchecked.
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Their idea was that, if hunters depleted the bison,
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Plains Indigenous peoples would be starved into submission.
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One US colonel told a visiting British lieutenant,
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“Kill every buffalo you can! Every buffalo dead is an Indian gone.”
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The US military refused to enforce treaties that barred civilian hunters
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from tribal territory,
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and it sometimes provided hunters with protection and ammunition.
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Many hide hunters killed 50 bison a day.
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03:00
During a two-month span in 1876,
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one hunter killed 5,855 bison,
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the near-constant firing of his rifle leaving him deaf in one ear.
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Some of the bison the hunters shot wandered away and died.
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Commonly, the hunters would only retrieve the bison's hides and tongues,
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leaving the rest to rot.
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Inexperienced skinners destroyed hides as they flayed them.
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And bison carcasses that were left were torn to pieces by other animals.
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So hunters began lacing bison meat with poison
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so they could also collect wolf pelts.
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Native American people protested,
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and humanitarian and animal rights groups tried to intervene
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as the bison population plummeted.
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Legislation that would make bison hunting illegal in federal territories
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even passed Congress in 1874— but the US President vetoed it.
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After all, the sordid strategy was working:
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many Plains nations faced starvation and were being forced onto reservations.
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Back in 1800, tens of millions of bison swept the Great Plains.
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By 1900, there were fewer than 1,000 in existence.
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Some wealthy US citizens created bison preserves which helped save the species.
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But the preserves functioned mainly as tourist attractions,
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and some of them carved even more land off Native American reservations.
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As of 2021, the bison population had grown to around 500,000.
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A vast majority live on private ranches.
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In recent years, Plains nations have reintroduced some 20,000 bison
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to tribal lands.
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They aim to heal and restore the relationship
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that was so flagrantly attacked during the bison slaughter.
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