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European Colonization Of Native Americans

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European diseases were responsible for the deaths of more than half of the Incan empire and for the passing of as much as ninety percent of the natives of coastal New England (Mann, “1491”). Such a reduction of the strength and numbers of American Indian civilization was a considerable promoting factor in European conquest of and colonization of the Americas. If Native Americans had been capable of exhibiting a more formidable immunological response to European pathogens, colonization of the Americas would have followed a vastly different path, leading to tremendous differences in the development of the New World and the Old World and their mutual relationship. If European disease had not affected Native Americans, the native populations of the New World would have been able to create a much more successful military resistance to foreign invaders. An utterly decimated Native American population was unable to oppose a superior European force, a force that was not beleaguered by susceptibility to the very diseases that destroyed Native American populations. Many researchers have tried to estimate the population of pre-Columbian America. Historian Dr. Henry F. Dobyns has suggested that the native population reached levels as far as 112 million in 1491 before Columbus’s arrival. This number plummeted to less than 6 million by 1650, largely as a result of exposure to wave after wave of European diseases, which proved to be extremely effective at terrorizing the native population

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