seawasp: (Battle Janus)
seawasp ([personal profile] seawasp) wrote2011-11-01 02:11 pm

A puzzle I've never asked about before...

... most of us already know that the majority of the deaths of Native Americans, at least in the first decades of contact, were due to European diseases sweeping like a pustulant wildfire through the unprotected populations. As the Native American populations had been out of contact with Europe and Asia for many thousands of years, they'd never had any reason to develop immunity to things like smallpox, measles, etc., and so what were bad-but-often-survivable diseases to the Europeans became 99% fatal plagues for them.

What I always wondered was this: The same separation existed on the other side, so why weren't all the Europeans wiped out from various American diseases that THEY had no immunity to? Why would Europe have developed natural bioweapons, so to speak, and not the native populations of the Americas?

[identity profile] brownkitty.livejournal.com 2011-11-02 01:50 am (UTC)(link)
I had assumed it was a combination of not having to work quite as hard for food, not having to work quite as hard to stay warm/dry, and having a larger pharmacological array to work with.