Deccan Chronicle

To curb climate change, increase green cover

- B.R. SRIKANTH

What caused the collapse of the Indus Valley Civilisati­on, one of the first, most peaceful and richest urban civilisati­ons of the world? Most likely, a prolonged droughtlik­e phase caused by climate change and not foreign invasion or natural disaster, says a recent study.

Climate change poses no small threat. Doomsday prophets may not be exaggerati­ng when they speak of its destructiv­e effects. And we don’t have to look far for an example of a civilisati­on wiped out by climate change.

Researcher­s have found evidence of climate change having gradually turned 1.5 million sq. km of lush green plains into an arid desert, leading to the disintegra­tion of the Indus Valley Civilisati­on.

Over 5,000 years ago, the Indus Valley was home to over five million people, one of the most successful civilisati­ons of its time. But an El Nino event that occurred about 4,350 years ago led to its demise.

The event triggered drought-like conditions that engulfed the region for a period of 900 years.

A decrease in snowfall over the northwest Himalaya, the source of the Indus River and its tributarie­s, caused massmigrat­ion as people were no longer able to practice agricultur­e, animal husbandry and a host of other vocations. Eventually, there was no civilisati­on left to speak of.

Such events are not strictly behind us, they may be in our future too, and scientists warn of their consequenc­es. “We should be prepared to experience such extreme dry or wet phases in the years to come; climate is dynamic,” says Prof. Anil K. Gupta, the director of the Wadia Institute of Himalaya Geology, Dehradun.

He points out that drought does not only mean an absence of rainfall; drought conditions can occur when there is a reduction in rainfall or river water supply, and they can lead to aridificat­ion. Such climate changes could be cyclical over a period of millennia.

“The people who lived in the Indus Valley Civilisati­on may have tried to adapt to the drought conditions, but the arid phase continued for over 900 years,” he says.

Prof. Gupta and his team studied the Tso Moriri Lake in Ladhak for two years. They chose the lake because of its sensitivit­y to changes in the monsoon as a result of its location on the northern fringe of the inter-tropical convergenc­e zone, which defines the path of the southwest monsoon and the monsoon trough.

Their team, along with one from IIT Kharagpur, chose the Institute of Estuarine and Coastal Research, Shanghai, to conduct extensive studies on climate-induced changes in the Tso Moriri Lake. “We were looking for an expert to help us produce energy models, and so we teamed up with Dr Bern Wuennemann, a German scientist who is on a sabbatical in China,” says Prof. Gupta.

The researcher­s carried out geochemica­l analysis of sediments collected from the Tso Moriri.

“Geochemica­l proxies in the sediments helped us unravel climate signals and identify the occurrence of dry and wet phases in the region. These phases were directly related to the strength of the southwest monsoon. We also used carbon dating and other methods to date the sediments to obtain an accurate chronology of climatic events such as droughts and floods,” adds Prof. Gupta, who is now with the Department of Geology and Geophysics of IIT Kharagpur.

A paper on this study has been accepted for publicatio­n by Elsevier’s journal, Quaternary Internatio­nal.

Prof. Gupta believes that the only way to mitigate the effects of climate change is to stop encroachin­g on lakes and

rivers, and increase green cover.

DROUGHT DOES NOT ONLY MEAN AN ABSENCE OF RAINFALL; DROUGHT CONDITIONS CAN OCCUR WHEN THERE IS A REDUCTION IN RAINFALL OR RIVER WATER SUPPLY, AND THEY CAN LEAD TO ARIDIFICAT­ION. SUCH CLIMATE CHANGES COULD BE CYCLICAL OVER A PERIOD OF MILLENNIA

 ??  ?? Prof. Anil Gupta and his team studied the Tso Moriri Lake in Ladhak for two years.
Prof. Anil Gupta and his team studied the Tso Moriri Lake in Ladhak for two years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India