id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_fwagouynprbrlooy4cqeg3lxnm Noble David Cook Sickness, Starvation, and Death in Early Hispaniola 2002 39 .pdf application/pdf 15892 1001 67 presents a sharper picture of both European and Taino health conditions relating to the second expedition to Hispaniola, speciªcally All accounts by the Europeans that come from the ªrst years of reconnaissance and settlement report the substantial loss of Taino Thanks to new information on the second Columbus expedition, especially the admiral's Relación del segundo viaje, a more sixteenth-century documents as scribal copies of letters written by Columbus." The arguments presented herein are similar to those proposed in Cook, Born to Die: Disease and New richer eyewitness narrative is provided, with a more critical evaluation of accounts; (2) evidence not available to the author when the book was published raises the possibility of smallpox among the Indian interpreters from Hispaniola, as they embarked on their return to the Varela and Gil note that "one third" of the population died, according to Las Casas, who used Columbus' text. ./cache/work_fwagouynprbrlooy4cqeg3lxnm.pdf ./txt/work_fwagouynprbrlooy4cqeg3lxnm.txt