Berliner Boersenzeitung - Jamestown, cradle of America, threatened by rising seas

EUR -
AED 4.179137
AFN 79.266701
ALL 98.18439
AMD 437.52275
ANG 2.036573
AOA 1044.116754
ARS 1347.622235
AUD 1.760078
AWG 2.04974
AZN 1.933701
BAM 1.955463
BBD 2.300934
BDT 139.256024
BGN 1.954954
BHD 0.429005
BIF 3392.301045
BMD 1.137954
BND 1.468341
BOB 7.874644
BRL 6.418347
BSD 1.139619
BTN 97.633761
BWP 15.297568
BYN 3.729442
BYR 22303.899953
BZD 2.289096
CAD 1.560806
CDF 3260.238216
CHF 0.936735
CLF 0.027878
CLP 1069.801799
CNY 8.198162
CNH 8.178124
COP 4675.056744
CRC 580.105221
CUC 1.137954
CUP 30.155783
CVE 110.245535
CZK 24.871242
DJF 202.937735
DKK 7.457833
DOP 67.289006
DZD 149.807056
EGP 56.521608
ERN 17.069311
ETB 155.600678
FJD 2.564719
FKP 0.839962
GBP 0.841233
GEL 3.118311
GGP 0.839962
GHS 11.657942
GIP 0.839962
GMD 81.932868
GNF 9877.473003
GTQ 8.752455
GYD 238.417904
HKD 8.927751
HNL 29.692149
HRK 7.536556
HTG 149.18366
HUF 403.666475
IDR 18548.765287
ILS 4.005655
IMP 0.839962
INR 97.493476
IQD 1492.83642
IRR 47936.315759
ISK 144.600058
JEP 0.839962
JMD 181.7803
JOD 0.806815
JPY 163.723123
KES 147.239779
KGS 99.514036
KHR 4570.193072
KMF 494.439764
KPW 1024.088639
KRW 1561.591239
KWD 0.349067
KYD 0.949632
KZT 583.666946
LAK 24613.654135
LBP 102106.971669
LKR 341.139767
LRD 227.349858
LSL 20.410696
LTL 3.360083
LVL 0.688337
LYD 6.204014
MAD 10.479496
MDL 19.600539
MGA 5179.176574
MKD 61.550095
MMK 2389.020834
MNT 4070.947986
MOP 9.209074
MRU 45.04764
MUR 51.492372
MVR 17.593149
MWK 1976.077145
MXN 21.884279
MYR 4.833463
MZN 72.726719
NAD 20.410696
NGN 1801.393172
NIO 41.933517
NOK 11.5448
NPR 156.216477
NZD 1.894745
OMR 0.437541
PAB 1.139604
PEN 4.12599
PGK 4.682214
PHP 63.450048
PKR 322.565616
PLN 4.274522
PYG 9105.552329
QAR 4.155266
RON 5.038741
RSD 117.219539
RUB 89.870727
RWF 1612.436557
SAR 4.268247
SBD 9.502789
SCR 16.468954
SDG 683.340588
SEK 10.938162
SGD 1.467568
SHP 0.894253
SLE 25.854343
SLL 23862.328307
SOS 651.293591
SRD 42.272151
STD 23553.35192
SVC 9.971239
SYP 14795.468413
SZL 20.401756
THB 37.076251
TJS 11.281908
TMT 3.988529
TND 3.392201
TOP 2.665202
TRY 44.538614
TTD 7.732635
TWD 34.103337
TZS 3061.897614
UAH 47.333567
UGX 4150.267216
USD 1.137954
UYU 47.511611
UZS 14626.481769
VES 107.93099
VND 29672.152616
VUV 137.507073
WST 3.142657
XAF 655.849846
XAG 0.032918
XAU 0.000338
XCD 3.075377
XDR 0.81567
XOF 655.852727
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.490201
ZAR 20.312651
ZMK 10242.952643
ZMW 30.597598
ZWL 366.420749
  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.12

    +0.23%

  • RBGPF

    -1.5000

    67.5

    -2.22%

  • NGG

    -0.6000

    71.33

    -0.84%

  • SCS

    0.3300

    10.52

    +3.14%

  • BCC

    2.5000

    87.6

    +2.85%

  • RIO

    -0.7300

    58.85

    -1.24%

  • CMSD

    0.0939

    22.16

    +0.42%

  • RYCEF

    0.1550

    12.035

    +1.29%

  • JRI

    0.0440

    12.96

    +0.34%

  • BCE

    -0.3400

    21.94

    -1.55%

  • RELX

    -0.5200

    54.06

    -0.96%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    10.3

    -0.97%

  • BTI

    0.9500

    46.34

    +2.05%

  • GSK

    -1.1950

    40.46

    -2.95%

  • AZN

    -0.1100

    71.82

    -0.15%

  • BP

    -0.0050

    29.56

    -0.02%

Jamestown, cradle of America, threatened by rising seas
Jamestown, cradle of America, threatened by rising seas / Photo: Ryan M. Kelly - AFP

Jamestown, cradle of America, threatened by rising seas

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.

Text size:

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 meter (yard), 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 centimeters) 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 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 favorable 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."

(G.Gruner--BBZ)