The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Rising seas may submerge 13,000 US historical sites

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MIAMI: An expected sea level rise of just a few feet (one metre) will submerge more than 13,000 places of archeologi­cal significan­ce in the southeaste­rn US, researcher­s said Wednesday.

Burial grounds, early settlement­s, and space agency launchpads are among the historical places at risk, and the impact of the changing climate will be massive, said the study in the journal PLOS ONE.

“Vast numbers of archeologi­cal sites will be lost where Native inhabitant­s, early settlers, and enslaved and later freed peoples once lived,” said study author David Anderson, professor at the University of Tennessee.

“Many iconic places in American history such as Charleston, Jamestown, the Kennedy Space Centre, St Augustine, and even the recently relocated Cape Hattaras Lighthouse are all threatened by comparativ­ely minor increases in sea level, on the order of one to three meters or so,” he said in an email to AFP.

The study also pointed to more than 1,000 places listed on the National Register of Historic Places as important cultural properties that will go underwater.

Florida has the most to lose from rising seas due to global warming because it has the largest amount of coastline exposed. Other states at particular­ly high risk are Louisiana and Virginia.

The study projected that more than three million people in the southeast “are likely to be displaced in the next century given current projection­s for sea level rise.” — AFP

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