LEFT: Cedars grow sparsely in the mountains near Jaj, Lebanon. RIGHT: Children swim by moai statues off the coast of Easter Island. Photos Josh Haner/The New York Times |
That was brought into sharp focus by a study issued Tuesday. It says that some of the most important ancient sites in the Mediterranean region — the Greek city of Ephesus, Istanbul’s historic districts, Venice’s canals — might not survive the era of climate change.
Those places joined a list of others that we’ve covered extensively here at The Times. Our series on cultural heritage has looked at the Cedars of Lebanon, the Stone Age villages of Scotland and the statues of Easter Island, all of which are threatened by climate change.
Rising
ocean levels are causing waves to break on the statues and platforms
built a thousand years ago.
The island risks losing its cultural
heritage. Again.
March 14, 2018
|
Saving Scotland’s Heritage From the Rising Seas Citizens and scientists on the Orkney Islands are racing to protect thousands of ancient structures threatened by climate change. Sept. 25, 2018 |
Climate Change Is Killing the Cedars of Lebanon Global warming could wipe out most of the country’s remaining cedar forests by the end of the century. July 18, 2018 |
If you haven’t seen our heritage series, or if you missed an article, this might be the occasion for a virtual journey to Lebanon, the Orkney Islands, or Easter Island. The images are stunning and the stories are gripping.
Links
- World Heritage Centre - Climate Change and World Heritage
- Cultural heritage has a lot to teach us about climate change
- Climate change endangers dozens of World Heritage sites
- Implications of climate change for Australia's World Heritage properties: a preliminary assessment
- Climate change and World Heritage
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