Looking at ancient societies to gauge the impact of sea-level rise
University of Exeter
Rising sea levels will affect coasts and human societies in complex and unpredictable ways, according to a new study that examined 12,000 years in which a large island became a cluster of smaller ones.
Researchers
reconstructed sea-level rise to produce maps of coastal changes at
thousand-year intervals and found that today's Isles of Scilly, off the UK's
south-west coast, emerged from a single island that only became the current
configuration of more than 140 islands less than 1,000 years ago.
The
study, led by the University of Exeter in partnership with Cornwall
Archaeological Unit, Cardiff University and 14 other institutes, found that
changes in both land area and human cultures happened at variable rates, and
often out of step with the prevailing rate of sea-level rise.
With
climate change now driving rapid sea-level rise, the team says the effects will
not always be as simple as a forced human retreat from coasts.
"When
we're thinking about future sea-level rise, we need to consider the complexity
of the systems involved, in terms of both the physical geography and the human
response" said lead author Dr Robert Barnett, of the University of Exeter.
"The
speed at which land disappears is not only a function of sea-level rise, it
depends on specific local geography, landforms and geology.
"Human
responses are likely to be equally localised. For example, communities may have
powerful reasons for refusing to abandon a particular place."
The
researchers developed a new 12,000-year sea-level curve for the Isles of
Scilly, and looked at this alongside new landscape, vegetation and human
population reconstructions created from pollen and charcoal data and
archaeological evidence gathered. The new research extends and enhances data
collected by the Lyonesse Project (2009 to 2013), a study of the historic
coastal and marine environment of the Isles of Scilly.
These findings suggest that during a period between 5,000 and 4,000 years ago land was rapidly becoming submerged. In response to this period of coastline reorganisation, people appeared to adapt to, rather than abandon, the new landscape.
By
the Bronze Age (after 4400 years ago), the archaeological record suggests the
area had a permanent population -- and instead of leaving the islands, it
appears that there may have been a "significant acceleration of
activity."
The
reasons for this are unclear, but one possibility is that new shallow seas and
tidal zones provided opportunities for fishing, shellfish collection and
hunting wildfowl.
This
period of rapid land loss happened at a time of relatively slow sea-level rise
-- because lots of Scilly's land at that point was relatively flat and close to
sea level.
The
study found that between 5000 and 4,000 years ago, land was being lost at a
rate of 10,000 m2 per year, which is equivalent to a large international rugby
stadium. However, about half of this land was turning into intertidal habitats,
which may have been able to support the coastal communities.
Charlie
Johns (Cornwall Archaeological Unit) co-director of the Lyonesse Project said
"This new research confirms that the period immediately before 4,000 years
ago saw some of the most significant loss of land at any time in the history of
Scilly -- equivalent to losing two-thirds of the entire modern area of the
islands."
After
4,000 years ago, the island group continued to be submerged by rising sea
levels, even during modest (e.g., 1 mm per year) rates of sea-level rise.
"It
is clear that rapid coastal change can happen even during relatively small and
gradual sea-level rise," said Dr Barnett.
"The
current rate of mean global sea-level rise (around 3.6 mm per year) is already
far greater than the local rate at the Isles of Scilly (1 to 2 mm per year)
that caused widespread coastal reorganisation between 5,000 and 4,000 years
ago.
"It
is even more important to consider the human responses to these physical
changes, which may be unpredictable.
"As
can be seen today across island nations, cultural practices define the response
of coastal communities, which can result in polarised agenda, such as the planned
relocation programmes in Fiji versus the climate-migration resistance seen in
Tavalu.
"In
the past, we saw that coastal reorganisation at the Isles of Scilly led to new
resource availability for coastal communities.
"It
is perhaps unlikely that future coastal reorganisation will lead to new
resource availability on scales capable of supporting entire communities.
"More
certain though, is that societal and cultural perspectives from coastal
populations will be critical for responding successfully to future climate
change."
The
research was funded by a grant from English Heritage (now Historic England) to
the Cornwall Council Historic Environment Service (now Cornwall Archaeological
Unit). Outputs from the original project (The Lyonesse project: A study of the
historic coastal and marine environment of the Isles of Scilly (2016)) are also
available from the Cornwall Archaeological Unit.