ANCIENT EGYPT MAY HOLD CLUES FOR CLIMATE CHANGE FIX


Experts are looking into Egypt's past to try to figure out how we'll deal with climate change in the future.
THE GIST
• Researchers are exploring how ancient Egyptians dealt with climate change.
• The strategies the ancient Egyptians employed could be relevant in today's warming world.



Blessed with incomparable archaeological wealth, Egypt is the most populous Arab nation and the number of inhabitants is expected to more than double by 2050 to 160 million, according to estimates.
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As world experts grapple with ways to contain global warming, researchers gathered in Egypt are seeking answers from the country's pharaonic past to help tackle environmental problems of the present.
Blessed with incomparable archaeological wealth, Egypt is the most populous Arab nation and the number of inhabitants is expected to more than double by 2050 to 160 million, according to estimates.
The effects of climate change have long been neglected in this large North African country which largely depends on the fertile Nile Delta to feed its growing population amid concerns about land erosion.
A three-day conference opened on Sunday with experts hoping to understand how the ancient Egyptians, who were capable of erecting the famous Giza pyramids, dealt with climate change.
"It's time we try to learn from the past so as to make better decisions for our future," said Shawkat Yahia, a researcher from the prestigious American University in Cairo.
He told the conference that answers were needed quickly, noting that the lives of millions of people are at risk if precious arable land disappears.
"By understanding more about how societies adapted to... their environment, we would be better prepared to plan and adapt to the current as well as the future challenges that face the Nile Delta," he said.
Yahia is among some 200 archaeologists, geographers, historians, geologists and palaeontologists from 25 countries who hope geoarchaeology -- the union between archaeology and geology -- will provide the key.
The conference is the first of its kind to be held in Egypt, where archaeology has always taken a rigid and classical approach to understanding the past.
"Traditional Egyptology must adapt to new approaches... (such as how) to reconstitute the environment in which people evolved," said Yann Tristant, of the French Institute of Oriental Archaeology (IFAO).
The IFAO has joined forces with France's national research center CNRS and Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities to create a platform for brainstorming that could help experts find solutions for the future.
Participants in the symposium have drawn up papers on a wealth of subjects ranging from pharaonic military campaigns to the patina known as "desert varnish" which forms a thin hard layer on the soil's surface.
The goal of their discussions is to unearth archaeological and geological evidence that may explain how the ancients survived climate change -- and what lessons can be drawn from it.
CNRS experts Pierre Zignani and Matthieu Ghilardi believe that much can be learned from the architects who designed the centuries-old temples that have withstood the ravages of time.
"Heavy rainfall because of climate changes well attested over the last millennia and major flood events from the Nile River were also integrated by the architects when building the religious structures," they said in a joint paper.
Researching the past "may provide information beyond our current fundamental knowledge and offer new critical information to our community."
Mahmoud Abdel Moneim of Egypt's Ain Shams University, in a paper prepared for the conference, wondered whether the head of the Great Sphinx could even come tumbling down because of climate change "during the present century."
"The rate of the weathering of the Sphinx is calculated at 0.066 millimeters per year," he said of the enigmatic half-lion, half-man statue which towers over the desert in the Giza pyramid complex.
Discovery News

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