Introduction
The collapse of complex human societies, while a subject
of perennial scholarly and popular fascination, remains poorly understood.
Tainter (1988), surveying previous attempts to account for the demise of
civilizations, noted that most proposed explanations of collapse failed
to adequately describe causative mechanisms, and relied either on ad-hoc
hypotheses based on details of specific cases or, by contrast, essentially
mystical claims (e.g., that civilizations have lifespans like those of
individual biological organisms). In another recent survey of collapses
in history (Yoffee and Cowgill 1988), contributors proposed widely divergent
explanatory models to account for broadly similar processes of decline
and breakdown.
Tainter (1988) proposed a general theory of collapse,
in which complex societies break down when increasing complexity results
in negative marginal returns, so that a decrease in sociopolitical complexity
yields net benefits to people in the society. This theory has important
strengths, and models many features of the breakdown of civilizations,
but it fails to account for other factors, especially the temporal dimensions
of the process. Tainter defines collapse as a process of marked sociopolitical
simplification unfolding on a timescale of "no more than a few decades"
(Tainter, 1988, p. 4), replacing an unsustainably high level of complexity
with a lower, more sustainable level. Many of the examples he cites, however,
fail to fit this description, but occurred over a period of centuries rather
than decades (see Table 1) and involved an extended process of progressive
disintegration rather than a rapid shift from an unsustainable state to
a sustainable one.
| Table 1:
Timescales of collapse for selected civilizations
(all dates from Tainter 1988) |
| Civilization |
Onset of collapse |
Time to collapse |
| Minoan Crete |
c. 1500 BCE |
c. 300 years |
| Mycenean Greece |
c.1200 BCE |
c. 150 years |
| Hittite Empire |
c. 120 BCE |
c. 100 years |
| Western Chou empire |
934 BCE |
163 years |
| Western Roman Empire |
166 CE |
310 years |
| Medieval Mesopotamia |
c.650 CE |
c. 550 years |
| Lowland Classic Maya |
c.750 CE |
c. 150 years |
|
The best documented examples of collapse, such as the
fall of the western Roman empire, show a distinctive temporal pattern even
more difficult to square with Tainter's theory. Thus, during the collapse
of Roman power, each of a series of crises led to loss of social complexity
and the establishment of temporary stability at a less complex level. Each
such level then proved to be unsustainable in turn, and was followed by
a further crisis and loss of complexity (Gibbon 1776-88; Tainter, 1988;
Grant, 1990). In many regions, furthermore, the sociopolitical complexity
remaining after the empire's final disintegration was far below the level
that had existed in the same area prior to its inclusion in the Imperial
system. Thus Britain in the late pre-Roman Iron Age, for example, had achieved
a stable and flourishing agricultural society with nascent urban centers
and international trade connections, while the same area remained depopulated,
impoverished, and politically chaotic for centuries following the collapse
of imperial authority (Snyder 2003).
An alternative model based on perspectives from human
ecology offers a more effective way to understand the collapse process.
This conceptual model, the theory of catabolic collapse, explains the breakdown
of complex societies as the result of a self-reinforcing cycle of decline
driven by interactions among resources, capital, production, and waste.
Previous work on the human ecology of past civilizations (e.g., Hughes,
1975; Sanders et al., 1979; Ponting, 1992; Elvin, 1993; Webster, 2002)
and attempts to project the impact of ecological factors on present societies
(e.g., Catton, 1980; Gever et al., 1986; Meadows et al., 1992; Duncan,
1993; Heinberg, 2002) have yielded data and analytical tools from which
a general theory of the collapse of complex societies may be developed.
This will be attempted here.
The Human Ecology of Collapse
At the highest level of abstraction, any human society
includes four core elements. Resources (R) are naturally occurring factors
in the environment which can be exploited by a particular society, but
have not yet been extracted and incorporated into the society's flows of
energy and material. Resources include material resources such as iron
ore not yet mined and naturally occurring soil fertility that has not yet
been exhausted by the society's agricultural methods, human resources such
as people not yet included in the workforce, and information resources
such as scientific discoveries which can be made by the society's methods
of research but have not yet been made. While the resources available to
any society, even the simplest, are numerous, complex, and changing, this
conceptual model treats resources as a single variable. This radical oversimplification
is acceptable solely because it allow certain large-scale patterns to be
seen clearly, and permits one model to be applied to the widest possible
range of societies.
Capital (C) consists of all factors from whatever source
that have been incorporated into the society's flows of energy and material
but are capable of further use. Capital includes physical capital such
as food, fields, tools, and buildings; human capital such as laborers and
scientists; social capital such as social hierarchies and economic systems;
and information capital such as technical knowledge. While a market system
is a form of social capital, and currency and coinage are forms of physical
capital, it should be noted that money as such is a mechanism for allocating
and controlling capital rather than a form of capital in its own right.
While the capital stocks of every society are diverse, complex, and changing,
again, for the sake of exposition, this model treats all capital as a single
variable.
Waste (W) consists of all factors that have been incorporated
into the society's flows of energy and material, and exploited to the point
that they are incapable of further use. Materials used or converted into
pollutants, tools and laborers at the end of their useful lives, and information
garbled or lost, all become waste. All waste is treated as a single variable
for the purpose of this conceptual model.
Production (P) is the process by which existing capital
and resources are combined to create new capital and waste. The quality
and quantity of new capital created by production are functions of the
resources and existing capital used in production. Resources and existing
capital may be substituted for one another in production, but the relation
between the two is nonlinear and complete substitution is impossible. As
the use of resources approaches zero, in particular, maintaining any given
level of production requires exponential increases in the use of existing
capital, due to the effect of decreasing marginal return (Clark and Haswell,
1966; Wilkinson, 1973; Tainter, 1988). For the purpose of this model, all
production is treated as a single variable.
In any human society, resources and capital enter the
production process, and new capital and waste leave it. Capital is also
subject to waste outside production uneaten food suffers spoilage,
for example, and unemployed laborers still grow old and die. Thus maintenance
of a steady state requires new capital from production to equal waste from
production and capital:
C(p) = W(p) + W(c) --> steady state (1)
where C(p) is new capital produced, W(p) is existing capital
converted to waste in the production of new capital, and W(c) is existing
capital converted to waste outside of production. The sum of W(p) and W(c)
is M(p), maintenance production, the level of production necessary to maintain
capital stocks at existing levels. Thus Equation 1 can be more simply put:
C(p) = M(p) --> steady state (2)
Societies which move from a steady state into a state
of expansion produce more than necessary to maintain existing capital stocks:
C(p) > M(p) --> expansion (3)
In the absence of effective limits to growth, once started,
this expansion becomes a self-reinforcing process, because additional capital
can be brought into the production process, where it generates yet more
new capital, which can be brought into the production process in turn.
The westward expansion of the United States in the 19th century offers
a well-documented example; in a resource-rich environment, increases in
human capital through immigration and increases in information capital
through development of new agricultural technologies increased production,
driving increases in physical capital through geographical expansion, settling
of arable land, manufacturing, etc., which increased production again and
drove further increases across the spectrum of capital (Billington 1982).
This process may be called an anabolic cycle.
The self-reinforcing aspect of an anabolic cycle is limited
by two factors that tend to limit increases in C(p). First, resources may
not be sufficient to maintain indefinite expansion. Here the use of "resources"
as a single variable must be set aside briefly. Each resource has a replenishment
rate, r(R), the rate at which new stocks of the resource become available
to the society. For any given resource and society at any given time, r(R)
is a weighted product of the rates of natural production, new discovery
of existing deposits, and development of alternative resources capable
of filling the same role in production. Over time, since discovery and
the development of replacements are both subject to decreasing marginal
returns (Clark and Haswell, 1966; Wilkinson, 1973; Tainter, 1988), r(R)
approaches asymptotically the combined rate at which the original resource
and replacements are created by natural processes.
Each resource also has a rate of use by the society, d(R),
and the relationship between d(R) and r(R) forms a core element in the
model. Resources used faster than their replenishment rate, d(R)/r(R) >1,
become depleted; a depleted resource must be replaced by existing capital
to maintain production, and the demand for capital increases exponentially
as depletion continues. Thus, unless all of a society's necessary resources
have an unlimited replenishment rate, C(p) cannot increase indefinitely
because d(R) will eventually exceed r(R), leading to depletion and exponential
increases in capital required to maintain C(p) at any given level. Liebig's
law of the minimum suggests that for any given society, the essential resource
with the highest value for d(R)/r(R) may be used as a working value of
d(R)/r(R) for resources as a whole.
Resource depletion is thus one of the two factors that
tends to overcome the momentum of an anabolic cycle. The second is inherent
in the relationship between capital and waste. As capital stocks increase,
M(p) rises, since W(c) rises proportionally to total capital; more capital
requires more maintenance and replacement. M(p) also rises as C(p) rises,
since increased production requires increased use of capital and thus increased
W(p), or conversion of capital to waste in the production process. All
other factors being equal, the effect of W(c) is to make M(p) rise faster
than C(p), since not all capital is involved in production at any given
time, but all capital is constantly subject to conversion to waste. Increased
C(p) relative to M(p) can be generated by decreasing capital stocks to
decrease W(c); by slowing the conversion of capital to waste to decrease
W(c) and/or W(p); by increasing the fraction of capital involved in production,
to increase C(p); or by increasing the intake of resources for production,
thus increasing C(p). If these are not done, or prove insufficient to meet
the needs of the situation, M(p) will rise to equal or exceed C(p) and
bring the anabolic cycle to a halt.
Broadly speaking, a society facing the end of an anabolic
cycle faces a choice between two strategies. One strategy is to move toward
a steady state in which C(p) = M(p), and d(R) = r(R) for every economically
significant resource. Barring the presence of environmental limits, this
requires social controls to keep capital stocks down to a level at which
maintenance costs can be met from current production, and maintain intake
of resources at or below replenishment rates. This can require difficult
collective choices, but as long as resource availability remains stable,
controls on capital growth stay in place, and the society escapes major
exogenous crises, this strategy can be pursued indefinitely.
The alternative is to attempt to prolong the anabolic
cycle through efforts to accelerate intake of resources through military
conquest, new technology, or other means. Since increasing production increases
W(p) and increasing capital stocks lead to increased W(c), however, such
efforts drive further increases in M(p). A society that attempts to maintain
an anabolic cycle indefinitely must therefore expand its use of resources
at an ever-increasing rate to keep C(p) from dropping below M(p). Since
this exacerbates problems with depletion, as discussed above, this strategy
may prove counterproductive.
If the attempt to achieve a steady state fails, or if
efforts at increasing resource intake fall irrevocably behind rising M(p),
a society enters a state of contraction, in which production of new capital
does not make up for losses due to waste:
C(p) < M(p) --> contraction (4)
The process of contraction takes two general forms, depending
on the replenishment rate of resources used by the society. A society that
uses resources at or below replenishment rate (d(R)/r(R) = 1), when production
of new capital falls short of maintenance needs, enters a maintenance crisis
in which capital of all kinds cannot be maintained and is converted to
waste: physical capital is destroyed or spoiled, human populations decline
in number, large-scale social organizations disintegrate into smaller and
more economical forms, and information is lost. Because resources are not
depleted, maintenance crises are generally self-limiting. As capital is
lost, M(p) declines steeply, while declines in C(p) due to capital loss
are cushioned to some extent by the steady supply of resources. This allows
a return to a steady state or the start of a new anabolic cycle once the
conversion of capital to waste brings M(p) back below C(p).
A society that uses resources beyond replenishment rate
(d(R)/r(R) > 1), when production of new capital falls short of maintenance
needs, risks a depletion crisis in which key features of a maintenance
crisis are amplified by the impact of depletion on production. As M(p)
exceeds C(p) and capital can no longer be maintained, it is converted to
waste and unavailable for use. Since depletion requires progressively greater
investments of capital in production, the loss of capital affects production
more seriously than in an equivalent maintenance crisis. Meanwhile further
production, even at a diminished rate, requires further use of depleted
resources, exacerbating the impact of depletion and the need for increased
capital to maintain production. With demand for capital rising as the supply
of capital falls, C(p) tends to decrease faster than M(p) and perpetuate
the crisis. The result is a catabolic cycle, a self-reinforcing process
in which C(p) stays below M(p) while both decline. Catabolic cycles may
occur in maintenance crises if the gap between C(p) and M(p) is large enough,
but tend to be self-limiting in such cases. In depletion crises, by contrast,
catabolic cycles can proceed to catabolic collapse, in which C(p) approaches
zero and most of a society's capital is converted to waste.
A society in a depletion crisis does not inevitably proceed
to catabolic collapse. If depletion is limited, so that decreased demand
for resources as a consequence of diminished production brings d(R) back
below r(R), the accelerated fall in C(p) may not take place and the crisis
may play out much like a maintenance crisis. If the gap between C(p) and
M(p) is modest, nonproductive capital may be diverted to production to
raise C(p) or preferentially converted to waste to bring down M(p), forcing
C(p) and M(p) temporarily into balance in order to buy time for a transition
to a steady state. A society in which depletion is advanced and M(p) rapidly
increasing relative to C(p), though, may not be able to escape catabolic
collapse even if such steps are taken. Cultural and political factors may
also make efforts to avoid catabolic collapse difficult to accomplish,
or indeed to contemplate.
Testing the Model
These two forms of collapse, maintenance crisis leading
to recovery and depletion crisis leading to catabolic collapse, are to
some extent ideal types, and form two ends of a complex spectrum of societal
breakdown. Most historical examples of collapse fall somewhere in the range
between. The limitations of the abstract and extremely simplified model
on which the theory is based should also be kept firmly in mind when attempting
to apply it to past or present examples. Still, a survey of historical
examples shows that many of these have features which support the model
proposed in this paper.
Closest to the maintenance-crisis end of the spectrum
are tribal societies such as the Kachin of Burma. Kachin communities cycle
up and down from relatively decentralized (gumlao) to relatively centralized
(shan) social forms without significant losses of physical, human, or information
capital. In this case anabolic cycles lead to the growth of organizational
capital in the form of relatively centralized social forms, but the maintenance
costs of this organizational capital prove to be unsustainable, leading
to maintenance crises, loss of social capital, and the restoration of less
resource- and capital-intensive social forms (Leach, 1954).
Essentially the same process on a larger and more destructive
scale characterizes the history of imperial China from the tenth century
BCE to the end of the nineteenth century CE.. Efficient cereal agriculture
and local market economies provided the foundation for a series of anabolic
cycles resulting in the establishment of centralized imperial dynastic
states (Gates, 1996; Di Cosmo, 1999). These anabolic cycles drove increases
in population, public works such as canals and flood control projects,
and sociopolitical organization, which proved unsustainable over the long
term. As maintenance costs exceeded the imperial government's resources,
repeated maintenance crises led to the breakup of national unity, invasion
by neighboring peoples, loss of infrastructure and steep declines in population
(Ho, 1970; Di Cosmo, 1999). Iimperial China's resource base had a relatively
high replenishment rate, due largely to the long-term sustainability of
traditional Chinese agriculture and the use of human and animal muscle
as the primary energy sources, and any significant depletion was made good
once population levels dropped (Elvin, 1993). Though resource depletion
played a limited role, the maintenance crises of imperial China were self-limiting
and resulted in contraction to more modest levels of population and sociopolitical
organization, rather than the total collapse of the society.
The collapse of the western Roman Empire, by contrast,
was a catabolic collapse driven by a combined maintenance and resource
crisis. While the ancient Mediterranean world, like imperial China, was
primarily dependent on readily replenished resources, the Empire itself
was the product of an anabolic cycle fueled by easily depleted resources
and driven by Roman military superiority. Beginning in the third century
BCE, Roman expansion transformed the capital of other societies into resources
for Rome as country after country was conquered and stripped of movable
wealth. Each new conquest increased the Roman resource base and helped
pay for further conquests. After the first century CE, though, further
expansion failed to pay its own costs. All remaining peoples within the
reach of Rome were either barbarian tribes with little wealth, such as
the Germans, or rival empires capable of defending themselves, such as
the Parthians (Jones 1974). Without income from new conquests, the maintenance
costs of empire proved unsustainable, and a catabolic cycle followed rapidly.
The first major breakdown in the imperial system came in 166 CE, and further
crises followed until the Western empire ceased to exist in 476 CE (Grant
1990, Grant 1999).
The Roman collapse has an instructive feature which offers
further support to the model presented here. In 297 the emperor Diocletian
divided the empire into western and eastern halves. Coordination between
them waned, and by the death of Theodosius I in 395, the two halves of
the empire were effectively independent states. Since the western empire
produced 1/3 the revenues of the eastern empire, but had more than twice
as much northern frontier to defend against barbarian encroachments, this
placed most of the original empire's vulnerabilities in one half and most
of its remaining resources in the other. In terms of the catabolic collapse
model, the eastern Empire allowed massive quantities of relatively unproductive,
high-maintenance capital to be converted to waste, bringing its M(p) below
its remaining C(p) and breaking out of the catabolic cycle. The eastern
empire's territory decreased further with the Muslim conquests of the seventh
and eighth centuries CE; while this was involuntary the effects were the
same. Successfully shifting to a level of organization that could be supported
sustainably by trade and agriculture within a more manageable territory,
the eastern Empire survived for nearly a millennium longer than its western
twin (Bury 1923).
Near the depletion crisis end of the spectrum is the collapse
of the Lowland Classic Maya in the eighth, ninth, and tenth centuries of
the Common Era. The most widely accepted model of the Maya collapse holds
on demographic and paleoecological evidence that Maya populations grew
to a level that could not be indefinitely supported by Mayan agricultural
practices on the nutrient-poor laterite soils of the Yucatan lowlands.
In terms of the present model, the key resource of soil fertility was used
at a rate exceeding its replenishment rate, and suffered severe depletion
as a result. Mayan polities also invested a large proportion of C(p) in
monumental building programs, which raised maintenance costs but could
not be readily used for production, and maintained these programs up to
the beginning of the Terminal Classic period. The result was a "rolling
collapse" over two centuries, from c. 750 CE to c. 950 CE, in which
Lowland Maya populations declined precipitously and scores of urban centers
were abandoned to the jungle (Willey and Shimkin 1973, Lowe 1985, Webster
2002).
The Lowland Classic Maya collapse is particularly suggestive
in that it appears to have been preceded by at least two previous breakdowns.
Preclassic sites such as El Mirador and Becan show many of the same artistic
and cultural elements as Classic Maya urban centers, but were abandoned
in a poorly documented earlier collapse around 150 CE (Webster 2002). A
second episode, the so-called Hiatus between the Early Classic and Late
Classic periods (500-600 CE), saw sharp declines in monumental building
and evidence for political decentralization (Willey 1974). Whether these
events were maintenance crises preceding the final resource crisis of the
Terminal Classic, or whether some other explanation is called for, is difficult
to determine from the available evidence.
Features of comparative sociology outside the realm of
collapse processes also offer support to the catabolic collapse model.
One implication of the model is that societies which persist over extended
periods will tend to have social mechanisms for limiting the growth of
capital, and thus artificially lowering M(p) below C(p). Such mechanisms
do in fact exist in a wide range of societies. Among the most common are
systems in which modest amounts of unproductive capital are regularly converted
to waste. Examples include aspects of the potlatch economy among Native
Americans of northwest North America (Kotschar, 1950; Rosman, 1971; Beck,
1993) and the ritual deposition of prestige metalwork in lakes and rivers
by Bronze and Iron Age peoples in much of western Europe (Bradley, 1990;
Randsborg, 1995). Such systems have been interpreted in many ways (Michaelson,
1979), but in terms of the model presented here, one of their functions
is to divert some of C(p) away from capital stocks requiring maintenance,
thus artificially lowering W(c) and make a catabolic cycle less likely.
Such practices clearly have many other meanings and functions
within societies. Nor does this interpretation require any awareness within
societies that systems of capital destruction prevent catabolic cycles.
Rather, if such systems make catabolic collapse less likely, cultures that
adopt such systems for other reasons would be more likely to survive over
the long term and to pass on such cultural elements to neighboring or successor
societies.
Conclusion: Collapse as a Succession Process
Even within the social sciences, the process by which
complex societies give way to smaller and simpler ones has often been presented
in language drawn from literary tragedy, as though the loss of sociocultural
complexity necessarily warranted a negative value judgment. This is understandable,
since the collapse of civilizations often involves catastrophic human mortality
and the loss of priceless cultural treasures, but like any value judgment
it can obscure important features of the matter at hand.
A less problematic approach to the phenomenon of collapse
derives from the idea of succession, a basic concept in the ecology of
nonhuman organisms. Succession describes the process by which an area not
yet occupied by living things is colonized by a variety of biotic assemblages,
called seres, each replacing a prior sere and then being replaced by a
later, until the process concludes with a stable, self-perpetuating climax
community (Odum 1969).
One feature of succession in many different environments
is a difference in resource use between earlier and later seres. Species
characteristic of earlier seral stages tend to maximize control of resources
and production of biomass per unit time, even at the cost of inefficiency;
thus such species tend to maximize production and distribution of offspring
even when this means the great majority of offspring fail to reach reproductive
maturity. Species typical of later seres, by contrast, tend to maximize
the efficiency of their resource use, even at the cost of limits to biomass
production and the distribution of individual organisms; thus these species
tend to maximize energy investment in individual offspring even when this
means that offspring are few and the species fails to occupy all available
niche spaces. Species of the first type, or R-selected species, have specialized
to flourish opportunistically in disturbed environments, while those of
the second type, or K-selected species, have specialized to form stable
biotic communities that change only with shifts in the broader environment
(Odum 1969).
Human societies and nonhuman species cannot be equated
in a simplistic manner, but the radical differences in subsistence and
production strategies among human societies allow them to be compared to
distinct biotic groups in certain contexts. Human societies enter into
common ecological relationships such as symbiosis, commensality, parasitism,
predation, and competitive exclusion with other societies. Thus processes
by which human societies are replaced by others may be usefully compared
to succession to see if common features emerge.
The model of catabolic collapse suggests one such common
feature. As outlined above, societies differ in their response to changes
in resource availability and maintenance costs. The spectrum of response
ranges from adjustment to a steady state, through a history of repeated
maintenance crises and partial breakdowns followed by recoveries, to severe
depletion crisis and total collapse. These differences, according to the
model presented here, unfold from differing relationships among resources,
capital, production, and waste, especially the relationships between capital
production and maintenance, C(p)/M(p), and between use and replenishment
rates of resources, d(R)/r(R).
These parallel differences between R-selected and K-selected
nonhuman species. A society that maximizes its production of capital, like
an R-selected species, prospers in an environment with substantial uncaptured
resources but falters once these are exhausted. Its successors are likely
to be societies that, like K-selected species, use key resources more sustainably
at the cost of decreased production of capital. Nonhuman climax communities
also typically display a higher diversity of species, but a lower population
per species, than earlier seral stages, and produce notably lower volumes
of biomass per unit time (Odum 1969).
Broadly similar changes often distinguish precollapse
and postcollapse societies. Thus the collapse of the western Roman Empire,
for example, could be seen as a succession process in which one seral stage,
dominated by a single sociopolitical "species" that maximized
capital production at the cost of inefficiency, was replaced by a more
diverse community of societies, consisting of many less populous "species"
better adapted to their own local conditions, and producing capital at
lower but more sustainable rates. Analyses that portray this transformation
as pure tragedy miss important aspects, since the Roman collapse enabled
other societies to emerge from Rome's shadow, and launched major cultural
initiatives such as vernacular literatures in the ancestors of today's
Celtic, Germanic, and Romance languages (Wiseman 1997). As with any succession
process, there were gainers as well as losers. If a lapse into fantasy
may be excused, were nonhuman biota literate and interested in their past,
a history of lake eutrophication written by meadow grasses would differ
sharply from one written by fish.
Since humans have capacities for change that most species
lack, the same human individuals can change from fish to grass, so to speak,
composing an "R-selected" production-maximizing society at one
time and its "K-selected" sustainability-maximizing replacement
at a later time. The example of the Kachin cited above shows that this
is not merely a theoretical possibility. However, as other cited examples
and the general evidence of history suggest, such a change is not inevitable.
The possibility of maintenance crisis needs to be considered whenever a
society shows signs of being unable to maintain its existing capital, and
the possibility of depletion crisis followed by catabolic collapse cannot
be excluded whenever capital production depends on the use of resources
at rates significantly above their rate of replacement.
Such assessments of past and present societies, in order
to achieve a high degree of analytic or predictive value, require careful
quantitative analysis of a sort this paper has not attempted. Since each
element in the conceptual model presented here stands for a diverse and
constantly changing set of variables, such analysis offers significant
challenges, and in many historical examples it may be impossible to go
beyond proxy measurements of uncertain value for crucial variables. However,
general patterns corresponding to the catabolic collapse model may be easier
to extract from incomplete data. Any society that displays broad increases
in most measures of capital production coupled with signs of serious depletion
of key resources, in particular, may be considered a potential candidate
for catabolic collapse.
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