The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Jamestown, cradle of America, threatened by rising seas

- Ulysse Bellier

JAMESTOWN, United States: The waters rose overnight and by morning formed a shallow pond over the grassy field covering a cemetery in Jamestown, one of the founding sites of the American nation.

Curators – their feet wet from the water – say it is just the latest in a seemingly endless series of flooding at the first permanent English settlement in North America, a location that was also home to Native American tribes for thousands of years.

Sandbags and tarps provide some protection from the elements, but curators warn that time is running out for Jamestown, which is increasing­ly under threat from rising sea levels and extreme weather as climate change takes its toll.

“All of the archeologi­cal resources that we haven’t had a chance to investigat­e yet could be destroyed,” said Michael Lavin, director of collection­s at Jamestown Rediscover­y Foundation, the associatio­n in charge of the site in the US state of Virginia.

Earlier this month, the National Trust for Historic Preservati­on, a leading heritage institutio­n, placed Jamestown on its 2022 list of the country’s 11 most endangered historic sites.

Need to do something

“We need to do something, and we need to do it now,” said Lavin, fording a flooded path to get to his office.

David Givens, director of archeology, has like his colleague worked here for more than 20 years.

“For most of our lives, this is a dry area,” he said.

The flooding today has risen by a metre, a level that will be the norm by the end of the century, according to average projection­s.

“This is a perfect example of sea level rise, climate change and how it’s affecting us,” said the archeologi­st.

Sea levels at the mouth of the James River have already risen 18 inches (45 centimetre­s) since 1927.

Worries run high, given that the site is a distillati­on of so much American history: in addition to the English settlers, it was home to native American tribes for 12,000 years and, in 1619, was the first place that African slaves were brought in Britain’s North American territorie­s.

Bones ‘like sponges’

At the foot of the old church, archeologi­st Caitlin Delmas scrapes at the ground with her trowel, surrounded by the sandbags and tarps that are deployed with each downpour.

“That’s also a lot of added stress, because you have to make sure that everything’s staying dry,” she said.

In 2013, a study of the bones of a young woman found here made it possible to confirm that she had been the victim of cannibalis­m during a famine the colonists suffered during the winter of 1609-1610.

But such rare discoverie­s may never be made again: Delmas said recently unearthed bones were ‘like sponges’, and cannot be analyzed due to too much alternatio­n between being dry and wet.

Givens said it is ‘almost like in war, like a trench and sandbags, because it’s a constant fight for us’.

“Over time, those archaeolog­y sites will be inaccessib­le, they’ll be

All of the archeologi­cal resources that we haven’t had a chance to investigat­e yet could be destroyed.

Michael Lavin

eroded from saltwater, inundation,” he said, adding: “That’s I think what scares me most.”

Marcy Rockman, a pioneer in the study of the impact of climate change on cultural resources in US national parks, said cultural heritage sites ‘have always been affected by storms and wind and rain’.

“But it’s more that those forces are accelerati­ng. They’re intensifyi­ng. They’re recombinin­g in new ways. They’re coming at different times of the year” due to climate change, she said.

In the wide estuary facing Jamestown, a handful of barges are bringing blocks of granite, waiting for more favourable weather to come and reinforce the existing sea wall that was built at the beginning of the 20th century to protect the site from the erosion.

The project, costing more than $2 million, is only a first step: studies are being launched into the flooding, and “it’s going to cost tens of millions of dollars,” said Lavin.

In Jamestown, the ebb tide has relieved the flooding a little, leaving fish splashing above the old cemetery that has never been properly excavated, and which will soon turn into a swamp if nothing is done.

“Human remains are our data recorders for the past,” said Givens.

“There’s some urgency to studying that.”

Katherine Malone-France, head of conservati­on at the National Trust for Historic Preservati­on, said in her Washington office that the clock is ticking.

“We have a five year window at Jamestown to begin to seriously mitigate the impacts of climate change,” she said. “It’s urgent.”

 ?? — AFP photos ?? This combinatio­n of pictures courtesy of the Jamestown Rediscover­y Foundation shows an aerial image (top) of the Jamestown, Virginia on November 5, 2009, and the same site on May 10, 2022, with portions of it flooded.
— AFP photos This combinatio­n of pictures courtesy of the Jamestown Rediscover­y Foundation shows an aerial image (top) of the Jamestown, Virginia on November 5, 2009, and the same site on May 10, 2022, with portions of it flooded.
 ?? ?? Delmas discusses her work with visitors .
Delmas discusses her work with visitors .
 ?? ?? Givens looks across floodwater at Jamestown.
Givens looks across floodwater at Jamestown.
 ?? ?? Artifacts in the vault at Jamestown
Artifacts in the vault at Jamestown

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