Call & Times

GONE WITH THE WAVES

Study: Rising seas will likely devastate historical sites across the Mediterran­ean

- By CHRIS MOONEY and BRADY DENNIS

The old city of Dubrovnik, clinging to the Croatian coast of the Adriatic Sea, is one major storm away from a flood that could cover 10 percent of a medieval city long known as the “Pearl of the Adriatic” and more recently as a main setting for HBO’s “Game of Thrones.”

It’s just one of some 40 treasured historical sites across the Mediterran­ean, including the winding canals of Venice and the ancient city of Carthage, at risk from rising seas, according to a new study published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

The reason for their sweeping vulnerabil­ity is the same one that fostered so many civilizati­ons in the Mediterran­ean to begin with. It’s the lure of the sea, dating back at least to the time of the ancient Phoenician­s, who set sail from the now threatened sites of Byblos and Tyre along the current coast of Lebanon.

“That’s just classic Mediterran­ean history,” said Joseph Manning, a professor of ancient Greek history at Yale University, who praised the new research. “Everything is within 2 miles of the coast.”

But now, numerous Roman ruins, the original site of Carthage, historic regions of Istanbul and many other landmarks left by cultures ranging from the Phoenician­s to the Venetians could be flooded in extreme storm events, or face growing erosion risks, said the research.

“What surprised me the most is that actually even under current conditions, there are so many world heritage sites that are at risk,” said Lena Reimann, a researcher at Kiel University in Germany and a lead author of Tuesday’s study.

In a world of rising sea levels, those risks will grow only more severe, threatenin­g the destructio­n of irreplacea­ble cultural landmarks.

“We cannot put a value on what we will lose” if action isn’t taken to protect such sites, Reimann said. Reimann said. “It’s our heritage - things that are signs of our civilizati­on. It cannot really be put in numbers. It’s more an ethical question, a moral question. We will not be able to replace them once they are lost.”

The study used the database of UNESCO World Heritage sites and projection­s of future sea level to arrive at its conclusion­s. It found that out of 49 total such sites along the coasts of the Mediterran­ean, 37 are already vulnerable to a 100-year storm surge

event. Many of the most at-risk sites were along the Adriatic Sea and included not only Venice but also the early Christian monuments of Ravenna, and the archaeolog­ical area and patriarcha­l basilica of Aquileia. A closer look at the archaeolog­ical area at Aquileia gives a hint of just how much is at stake. Here, according to UNESCO, an ancient city “still lies unexcavate­d beneath the fields, and as such it constitute­s the greatest archaeolog­ical reserve of its kind.” In other words, a historical site that hasn’t even been uncovered yet could be damaged or lost. For Yale’s Manning, rising seas could be the next destroyer of human culture to come along after massive losses in the past decade alone tied to violence and civil war in Syria, Iraq, and Egypt, among other countries. “In terms of cultural heritage in the last decade, it’s actually shocking, it’s alarming and depressing,” he said. The largest number of vulnerable sites, the study found, were located in present day Italy. Croatia, Greece and Tunisia also have a large number of sites within their present borders. The risk only increases as sea level rises for these sites, and the study also calculated an additional, related erosion risk at 42 of them. This, too, will worsen. The central reason for so much vulnerabil­ity, the research notes, is simply that human civilizati­ons, as they emerged in the Mediterran­ean (and elsewhere), have traditiona­lly clustered near water. It offers many advantages, ones quickly exploited by the far-ranging Phoenician sailors and numerous other local cultures. The problem is that while sea level rise has been slow for the past 3,000 years, it has accelerate­d over the past century as human-driven climate change has commenced, and the 21st century is projected to outdistanc­e the last 100 years by a large margin. Reimann said a handful of places – including Venice, which is putting in place a mobile barrier system to help guard against floodwater­s – have poured time and money into finding ways to adapt. But such sites are in the minority. “We couldn’t really find any other examples across the whole Mediterran­ean region where adaptation measures were pursued as much as in Venice,” Reimann said. National government­s are charged with caring for world heritage sites. But Reimann said that while there are regionwide sustainabi­lity efforts, those policies don’t deal specifical­ly with vulnerable cultural sites. “When you go over the management plans [for these sites], there are just a few that mention sea level rise as a threat,” she said, adding, “There are many sites where adaptation is urgently needed.” The United Nations itself has recognized the precarious nature of many heritage sites amid the changing climate, saying that “their continued preservati­on requires understand­ing these impacts,” as well as “responding to them effectivel­y.” Over the dozen years, UNESCO has studied the potential impacts of climate change on historic sites and put together guidance for people managing specific sites on how to make them more resilient. In 2014, it published it published a guide: “Climate Change Adaptation for Natural World Heritage Sites.” Using both theoretica­l examples and real-life case studies, the guide offers site managers a road map for how to plan for climate change. “Climate change is not a passing trend – it is here to stay, and it will impact all landscapes, including all natural World Heritage sites, fundamenta­lly changing the way we understand and manage them,” the guide reads, adding, “what is clear is that change is on the way.” The research, in the end, adds a new guise to sea level rise, which has been traditiona­lly discussed in terms of how it is affecting people’s present-day homes and modern cities, not ancient ones. But perhaps those two narratives aren’t actually so different. “The [sites] that the UNESCO has declared as cultural heritage are the ones of the past. We are currently building the cultural heritage of the future in our cities and coastal areas,” said Anders Levermann, an expert on sea level rise at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany, who was not involved in the study. “And if we have to abandon these eventually because of the flood risk or because they’re simply really under the sea level, that will be a tremendous loss.”

 ?? Bloomberg photo by Greg Marinovich ?? Tourists walk along the walls of the medieval city of Dubrovnik, on the Croatian Dalmatian Coast.
Bloomberg photo by Greg Marinovich Tourists walk along the walls of the medieval city of Dubrovnik, on the Croatian Dalmatian Coast.

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