For International #WorldHeritageDay, a thread about the threat of climate change to these incredible places. Starting off at the Heart of Neolithic #Orkney World Heritage site in #Scotland at one of the world's oldest stone circles, #StonesOfStenness.
Skara Brae at the edge of Skaill Bay on Mainland, Orkney is, one of the best preserved Stone Age villages in Europe but is increasingly under threat from coastal erosion and worsening storms, & the Ring of Brodgar is vulnerable to extreme rainfall.
Everyone knows that #Venice is a risk from sea level rise & flooding, but there are so many more #WorldHeritage sites that are already impacted or highly vulnerable too.
Wildfires driven by heat and drought threaten World Heritage habitats across the world, including the incredibly fragile upland sites of the Tasmanian Wilderness. Photo courtesy of Dan Broun ( @dsb_isms).
In the US, wildfire season has lengthened by weeks since the '70s, & fires are burning bigger & hotter, devastating forests, worsening post-fire flash floods & threatening World Heritage sites such as Mesa Verde National Park, Yellowstone & places like Bandelier National Monument
And in Yellowstone, one of the US's most famous #WorldHeritage sites, beetles aided by warmer winters are devastating whitebark pine - a keystone species that provides a vitally important food source for grizzly bear populations.
There is a whole issue of "Yellowstone Science" on climate impacts in the National Park:
https://www.nps.gov/yell/learn/upload/Accessible-PDF-prepared-for-WEB-of-Yellowstone-Science-23-1.pdf
And there is much more on climate change threats to natural sites in @IUCN's World Heritage Outlook, which will be updated in 2020. https://worldheritageoutlook.iucn.org/home-page  @IUCNclimatePASG
Meanwhile, in 2019 @ICOMOS published the "Future of Our Pasts" about the intersection of climate change & cultural heritage, including a comprehensive look at how different types of climate impacts can affect everything from built to intangible heritage: https://www.icomos.org/en/77-articles-en-francais/59522-icomos-releases-future-of-our-pasts-report-to-increase-engagement-of-cultural-heritage-in-climate-action
One big issue is that unsustainable #tourism can combine with climate change, as at Angor in Cambodia, where research shows that water extraction for tourism development combine with reduced rainfall to cause subsidence & damage to the ancient buildings
https://advances.sciencemag.org/content/3/3/e1601284could
We produced a whole series of #World Heritage case studies on climate change with @UNESCO, @UNEP & @IUCN. https://whc.unesco.org/en/activities/883/ @UCSUSA @ICOMOS @dpshurl @RichardVeillon @mechtildrossler @AssisRey.
The report looked at climate impacts on #WorldHeritage sites including Galapagos, South Africa's Cape Floral Kingdom, Sagarmartha National Park (Nepal) & Shiretoko in Japan. It identified climate change as the fastest growing threat to World Heritage. https://www.newyorker.com/news/amy-davidson/how-climate-change-will-destroy-our-global-heritage
#Uganda will host the 2021 World Heritage Committee meeting and two of its three sites are vulnerable to climate change - Rwenzori (Mountains of the Moon), from loss of snow and ice, & the #Bwindi Impenetrable forest from changes in habitat & extreme weather. #gorillas.
Bwindi is home to some of the world's last mountain gorillas, #coronavirus is a dual threat - cutting off tourism income needed for conservation efforts & increasing the risk of the primates catching the disease from humans. Climate change adds to these threats.
Ugandan NGO @CTPHuganda & its leader @DoctorGladys are working to reduce health threats to Bwindi's gorillas with training & community education & health programs. Climate change and #coronavirus both add to the huge problems facing the great apes of #Africa. @ #WorldHeritageDay
Illulissat Icefjord World Heritage site at the mouth of the giant Sermeq Kujalleq glacier is highly impacted by climate change, & archaeological sites there and elsewhere in Greenland are simply decaying away as conditions become warmer.
@Nationalmuseet
We'll be heading to Norway's Vega Archipelago World Heritage site (we hope) at the end of this year for another Climate Vulnerability Index (CVI) workshop with @JCU, @AdaptNHeritage & the Norwegian Dept. for Cultural Heritage Mgmt. #CVIHeritage @sfheron
It'll follow-on the workshop for the tri-national World Heritage site of the Wadden Sea that happened in February. @WaddenseaUNESCO
But while we are all in lockdown mode, when you think of having a drink, remember that the #Champagne & #Prosecco World Heritage landscapes are also struggling with production dificulties due to changing climatic conditions.
Coming back to natural marine sites again. Coral reefs truly are doomed if we don't keep below 1.5C. UNESCO reports show devastating impact for World Heritage coral reefs - 25 of 29 at severe ris, including Great Barrier Reef. @sfheron @ProfTerryHughes https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000265625
Or is there some common interest that we can see connecting the committee members that are slowing down action. Surely they are not coal and oil producers?
But there is a fast-growing cadre of NGO, academic & heritage managers working to address World Heritage & climate, including @AndrewSPotts @DrMWiggins @hannahfluck @DrRebeccaJones1 @alice_lyall @sfheron @ProfTerryHughes @marcyrockman @pgonzaleztweet @ajatnuvuk @UHIArchaeology...
Many "mixed" World Heritage sites face threats to both their natural & cultural values & attributes. For example, the archaeology of Scotland's St.Kilda might be vulnerable, but so are its #seabird populations because of changes in the marine food web. #teampuffin #teamgannet.
There are some fantastic monitoring programs for cultural heritage impacts including World Heritage sites, many using citizen science. Just from the UK for example: @CoastArch, @CHERISHproj, @dynamiccoats & @MOLArchaeology, and in the US others from @semiller88 & @iriveracollazo
And there are great efforts to integrate climate change into World Heritage management too. For example, the joint @ICCROM @IUCN & Norwegian government World Heritage Leadership program. https://www.iccrom.org/section/world-heritage-leadership
@joeugene81 @ICCROM_King @JigyasuRohit @AdaptNHeritage
For many World Heritage sites we know very little about how climate change will affect them. For example, what will it mean for the multiple transnational Silk Road sites in China, Kazakhstan & Kyrgyzstan? Or #Chaco Canyon in the USA, where gas fracking is also encroaching.
And in some World Heritage sites, it'll be the #intangible cultural heritage that will be most affected - the indigenous knowledge lost, seasonal festivals disrupted, sacred sites damaged, or the traditional plants & building materials no longer available in a changed climate.
Traditional foods are becoming harder to grow in some places - for example taro gardens at the edge of Lake Tegano in East Rennell World Heritage site (Solomon Islands). Traditional rice varieties of the Ifugao people in the Philippines are less suitable in a changed climate.
Rock art in World Heritage sites including Mesa Verde National Park, the Tasmanian Wilderness, Gobustan in Azerbaijan, and many others, is at risk from extreme weather, wildfires, wind abrasion and even sea level rise in a changing climate.
Changing indoor heat & humidity is also a worry for World Heritage museums and historic houses, potentially damaging paintings, furniture, tapestries & fabrics, & increasing problems with mould and insect damage.
…https://coalitionofmuseumsforclimatejustice.files.wordpress.com/2017/08/museum-collections-and-climate-change.pdf
As we come to the end of #WorldHeritageDay keep in mind the amazing managers of World Heritage sites who are looking for the best climate science & are developing adaptation & resilience strategies - more often than not, without adequate resources. @WeAreGTWHI @HistEnvScot #kilwa
We'll be looking for a new draft climate policy for the World Heritage Convention soon, & planning a climate vulnerability assessment (CVI) for San Juan, Puerto Rico. Watch this space! Meanwhile please connect with @ICOMOS & the @ClimateHeritage Network http://climateheritage.org .
You can follow @AdamCMarkham.
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