Solar Energy News  
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Archaeologists warn of climate threat to past treasures

by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Dec 7, 2010
Mummies decaying in Siberia, pyramids vanishing under the sand in Sudan, Maya temples collapsing: climate change risks destroying countless treasures from our shared past, archaeologists warn.

Melting ice can unlock ancient secrets from the ground, as with the discovery in 1991 of "Oetzi", a 5,300-year-old warrior whose body had been preserved through the millennia inside an Alpine glacier.

But as ice caps melt, deserts spread, ocean levels rise and hurricanes intensify -- all forecast effects of man-made global warming -- Henri-Paul Francfort of the CNRS research institute fears a heavy toll on world heritage.

Francfort is head of a French archaeological team in Central Asia that played an important part in excavating the Kurgans, or frozen tombs, of nomadic Scythian tribes in Siberia's Altai mountains.

He fears they now risk being lost.

"The permafrost, the constantly frozen layer of earth that protected them up until now, is melting," he said. "There are mummified, tattooed bodies, buried with sacrificed horses, furs, wooden objects and clothes."

"With my Russian colleagues, we are watching the part of the soil that melts each season, and which is getting deeper and deeper. Unless we take preventative action, it will soon be too late."

According to Francfort, Oetzi's remains were most certainly uncovered due to a receding high-altitude glacier in the Italian Tyrol region.

"Melting glaciers, especially in Norway, now regularly reveal other treasures," he said.

Like a modern-day Atlantis, experts warn that rising ocean levels -- which some forecast could jump a metre by 2100 -- stand to wipe out dozens of coastal archaeological sites, with Pacific islands on the frontline.

In Tanzania, maritime erosion has already destroyed a wall of the Kilwa fort, built by Portuguese colonialists on an island just off the coast in 1505, Francfort said.

And in Bangladesh, the ruined city of Panam in Sonargaon, the heart of the kingdom of Bengal from the 15th to 19th centuries, is regularly hit by flooding.

Today, Panam is one of 100 sites listed by the UN culture agency UNESCO as threatened by climate change.

A forecast spike in unpredictable weather events -- hurricanes chief among them -- is another major source of concern, says Dominique Michelet, a specialist of American archaeology at the CNRS.

He cites the case of Chan Chan in Peru, former capital of the Chimu civilisation and the largest pre-Colombian city in Latin America, which is already severely exposed to flooding linked to the El Nino weather pattern.

Likewise, the Maya temple of Tabasqueno in Mexico had to be largely rebuilt after it was badly damaged by two tornadoes -- Opalo and Roxana -- in 1995.

"Archaeologists had managed to stabilise the main temple, but the buildings became saturated with water and collapsed inward," Michelet said.

Sand is one of the worst enemies of archaeological sites, like in Sudan where dunes are encroaching on the burial pyramids of Meroe, the capital of a flourishing kingdom from the third century BC to the fourth AD.

"In Oman, two cyclones -- Gonu un 2007 and Phet last year -- totally buried in sand sites that date back to the fifth and sixth millennia BC," said Vincent Charpentier, of the INRAP archaeological research centre.

Michelet warns that UNESCO's efforts so far to identify at-risk sites do not go far enough, calling for the world to "sound the alert" over the threat.

"Archaeology is part of human memory," said Francfort, who suggests radical solutions may be needed to protect past treasures from climate change, citing the case of the Abu Simbel rock temples in Egypt.

Following a concerted international effort, the entire complex was relocated in the 1960s to prevent them being submerged by the building of a dam on the River Nile.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


CLIMATE SCIENCE
WikiLeaks adds twist to climate hopes
Cancun, Mexico (AFP) Dec 6, 2010
Climate negotiators Monday hailed a brighter mood in often torturous global talks, but disclosures by WikiLeaks of hard-nosed behind-the-scenes diplomacy threatened to reopen fissures. A two-week session in the Mexican resort of Cancun is looking to make incremental progress toward a new treaty to fight climate change, which UN scientists warn threatens severe effects for the planet if unche ... read more







CLIMATE SCIENCE
Ethanol in crosshairs as deadline nears on tax credit

The Future Of Metabolic Engineering - Designer Molecules, Cells And Microorganisms

Can Engineered Bugs Help Generate Biofuels

Biofuels Have Consequences On Water Quality And Quantity In Mississippi

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Underwater Robots On Course To The Deep Sea

Development Of Humanoid Robot To Test Warfighter Protection Equipment

Robo-Op Marks New World First For Heart Procedure

NASA NIA To Sponsor Student Planetary Rover Challenge

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Repair And Inspection Services For The Expanding Wind Power Industry

Vestas Selects Broadwind Towers For Glacier Hills Wind Project

Optimizing Large Wind Farms

Enhancing The Efficiency Of Wind Turbines

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Volvo, Geely in China plant talks

Nissan sets December 20 launch date for electric Leaf

Can Lima unclog its traffic nightmare?

Vatican examining electric-powered popemobile

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Russia wants EU to back South Stream

Non-Profit Group Establishes Florida Fusion Center

Simultaneously Desalinating Water, Making Hydrogen And Treating Wastewater

Argentina likely on verge of big gas find

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Slovak lawmakers slap 80 percent tax on carbon credit sales

How To Soften A Diamond

Pink diamond sold for 23 million US dollars at auction

Carbon price by 2011, Australia chief says

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Energy Use In The Media Cloud

Singapore in tough environmental balancing act

EU over-consumes resources, agency says

Germany faces massive power grid overhaul

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Burnt Israel forest faces long recovery: experts

Climate talks eye deforestation pact

Ca. 'Ghosts of the Forest' studied

American west's forests face troubling carbon trend


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement