Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach
I love African names. I mean, could there be a more euphonious name than “Dikembe Mutumbo”? That’s just poetry. In any case, this post is about a place charmingly yclept “Kilwa Kisiwani Gereza”. It seems it’s a new poster child for the dire effects of “climate change”. This alleged victim of evil sea level rise is the ancient African trading center of Kilwa Kisiwani in Tanzania, located at 8.97°S, 39.50°E. The city was originally of Muslim origin. It was taken over briefly by the Portuguese explorer Vasco de Gama in 1502. There’s a World Heritage Historical Site there, crumbling into ruin. The Heritage folks say:
The ancient fortress of Gereza … is slowly collapsing into the Indian Ocean as sea level rises due to climate change.
Figure 1. The city of Kilwa Kisiwani (“Kilwa on the Island), from a Portuguese drawing done some time prior to 1572. Source.
So what is all of the sea level hyperventilation about? For that, we need to turn to the Global Heritage Network. Here’s what they have to say:
Figure 2. Information on the fortress of Gereza from the Global Heritage Network. Date of the lower photograph unknown. Photos from the GHN Briefing Paper (PDF)
Not a pretty picture …
The city has an interesting history. A Portuguese site says:
Currently only the turret of Gereza is of Portuguese origin, with the remaining structure undergoing significant changes after the Portuguese left the island in 1512, giving place to the Omani sultans, which have shared power for centuries. The main wooden gate, decorated with floral motifs mixed with verses from the Koran, is the original and clearly of Arab origin. A sign in front, already a good few decades old, cites an urgent conservation project implemented by the department of antiquities of Tanzania and UNESCO, with Norwegian funding. The state of the structure is pitiful, which well explains the fact that since 2004, this place has been on the prestigious list of World Heritage Sites in Danger. The disassembled, out-of-order spotlights in front of the fort testify to that very well.
Kilwa was an important city in the Muslim commercial empire, which extended from the East African coast to the Moluccas, passing through the Persian Gulf and India, though at the time the Portuguese arrived they were already in decline. In 1502, Vasco da Gama took over the city, making the king a vassal of of the Portuguese King. With the proceeds of the first tribute in gold from the new African possession the famous monarch ordered the making of the famous “Custodia of Bethlehem”, one of the masterpieces of Portuguese art. Simultaneously with Sofala, a fortress in Kilwa was erected in 1506, under the direct supervision of D. Francisco de Almeida, the first structure built of stone and mortar in the region – a typical medieval castle with four corner towers and one tower, not in the central square, but leaning against the main face of the wall. Its main function was to provide shelter to passengers of the boats on the India route. The Portuguese presence, however, was quite short. Due to high maintenance costs and questions of military strategy (there were already forts near the Mombasa and Mozambique), Kilwa was abandoned by the Portuguese in 1512, again assuming the status of one of the city-states of the Swahili world. It would then be occupied and reoccupied by successive sultans that would adapt it to their needs and desires. In 1843, the transformation of nearby Kivinje in seaport led to the abandonment of Kilwa, and the consequent destruction of their buildings.
There’s a detailed history of Kilwa Kisiwani here .
So is “climate change” in the form of sea level rise really a problem for the Heritage site, the fortress Gereza? The Global Heritage Network folks say it is. But there is no mention of that on their main information site.
Well, let’s do what the Global Heritage folks didn’t do … take a look at the observations to see what the sea level is doing in that area. The nearest (and only nearby) tide station with a somewhat long-term record is in Zanzibar, and is available from the web site of the Permanent Service for the Mean Sea Level (PSMSL). You can also download satellite data showing sea level changes for the area just offshore of Kilwa Kisiwani (9°S, 40°E) from the University of Colorado. I have overlaid them below.
Figure 3. Tide gauge (Zanzibar) and satellite (offshore from Kilwa Kisiwani) records of sea level height. Photo of the World Heritage Site (photo source).
As you can see, we have very good agreement between the satellite and tide gauge records, which increases the confidence in both. As you can also see, over the last quarter century the massive recent sea level rise has brought the local sea level about back to where it was 25 years before …
So we can throw out all of the nonsense about sea level rise. Since 1985, sea level dropped about two-four inches (50-100 mm) and rose back up again. Anyone who thinks that was the threat to the ancient fort isn’t following the story.
So if sea level rise is not the cause of the fort crumbling into the sea, what is? From an examination of the site, it seems obvious that the answer is plain old garden variety erosion. Here’s what the area looks like:
Figure 4. Overview of Kilwa Kisiwani.
This is a tidal laguna with surrounding marshlands. There are large areas of mangroves, and extensive sedimentation. Given the area of the laguna and the size of the outlets, with the local ~ four foot tides it gets fairly strong tidal currents. In other words, as a seaman I can assure you that we have no reason to expect that any of the islands, sandbars, and channels will have great permanence. In Figure 5 there is a closer look, this time an aerial view looking southeast along the coast to duplicate Figure 1, reveals more about the underwater geography.
Figure 5. Kilwa Kisiwani Island. Note the underwater shoal where the island has been eroded, offshore from the historical remains of the ancient fort at the lower right.
This type of sedimentary, marshy land is never stable. Year after year the islands and the channels shift and change. Rather than being surprised that the 500-year-old fort is falling in the ocean, we should be surprised that it has lasted this long.
This kind of sedimentation and buildup is very sensitive to the immediate conditions. Consider the sand and sediment in the lower picture in Figure 2. You may not have noticed that the sand has built up on the left side of the ancient fortress. Contrast that to the way the sand has eaten away, leaving only stone, on the right side of the fortress. The cause of this is the mere presence of the stones in the foreground. You can see how they have changed the circulation, and are causing even further erosion at the base of the fort … and the Global Heritage folks want us to believe the culprit is the (non-existent) sea level rise?
This is another example of why I say that the problem in climate science is not communication. The problem is not that the scientists have not figured out how to get their message across.
The problem is bogus science and, as in this case and far too often, exaggerated or false claims. Once again, a serious climate claim from an internationally respected organization (this time the Global Heritage Network) has been shown to be a complete fantasy … and there’s no amount of better spin or framing or communication that will solve that.
w.
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Now for some good news:
Is the rising “…in the pipeline”?
And does this depend on what is in the pipe you’re smoking?
Willis – thanks as ever for a lucent and informative post. Love the yclept!
Climate change, aka manmade climate change, has become the modern-day equivalent of “God” or “the gods” in explaining the forces of nature. Now, as in olden times, it is because of something we did (burned too many fossil fuels) or didn’t do (switch to non-“carbon-emitting” or “green” energy), thus making the god or gods of climate change angry. When the whole CAGW/CC/etc. fraud and greed-driven hysteria has finally been laid to rest, figuring out how and why it all happened will take decades. It will be a puzzle for future sociologists and psychologists. Never again will the word of scientists, and especially scientific organizations be taken as the truth. Perhaps that is a good thing.
So, essentially, they’re ever so worried the pesky castle will disappear because they’ve spent so much time, money, and resources on restoring it and protecting it from (weird) erosion, (acid) rain, (unnatural, most likely, manmade) storms, natural (national) climate, natural (regional) weather, and of course the degradation of crappy building materials as time moves on.
Oh, right, they didn’t, so, essentially, they just want more funding without actually having to spend it on conservation.
Another great post Willis !!
“Rather than being surprised that the 500-year-old fort is falling in the ocean, we should be surprised that it has lasted this long.”
Thanks Willis.
This is another example of why I say that the problem in climate science is not communication. The problem is not that the scientists have not figured out how to get their message across.
The problem is bogus science and, as in this case and far too often, exaggerated or false claims.
I spent a recent evening at a dinner party next to a ‘social engineer’ who is devoting his life to improving the communication of “climate change” (he would not utter ‘global warming’), and how to mitigate it, on small islands in the south Pacific. Unable to come to some point of cogent conversation wrt climate, I turned to paleo-anthropology. I was fascinated how the science around climate isn’t even questioned, or viewed with any scepticism. It is indeed all about how to package this three-day old fish to conceal the odor.
And gee, Kilwa Kisiwani Gereza’s location on the rifted portion of the African Tectonic Plate would mean that it’s underpinnings would never EVER be prone to vertical tectonic movements! /sarc
Willis shines the bright light of good science, research and good sense on another bogus problem.
I am waiting for your book, Willis!
There’s an Error in 2nd para after the sea level gauge chart “about two-four inches (50-100 cm)” Should be mm not cm. Otherwise great work Willis.
[Thanx, fixed. ~dbs, mod.]
Euphonious? Yclept? Good science with a free vocabulary lesson!
Of course, the real problem is that, if you were the conservationist in charge of this fort, and you had just been told that there was no money in the standard architecture budget due to cuts, but there was a lot of money available if you put a grant request in to the UN Climate Change fund, what would you do?
In fact, there’s a good chance that the standard architecture budget has been cut because they have been forced to buy a windmill and solar panels for the conservationist’s head office. So if you put in a claim to save your fort from ‘Global Warming’, you’d just be getting some of your original money back…
“Rather than being surprised that the 500-year-old fort is falling in the ocean, we should be surprised that it has lasted this long.”
A testament to 500-year-old construction techniques. 😉
Depending on the type of construction, mortar mixed with sea water tends to “melt” over time.
Apparently it’s the World Monument fund that has it listed as being threatend by Climate Change:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilwa_Kisiwani
http://www.wmf.org/project/historic-sites-kilwa#
“Kilwa Fort was ravaged by the elements and threatened by rising sea levels. The fort was placed on WMF’s first Watch list in 1996; the historic sites on the island were placed on the 2008 Watch.”
Scares are obviously good money spinners.
Further reading would seem to indicate that the erosion has more to do with the cutting down of the local mangrove forests that anything else. But hey, why blame the locals when you can blame nasty westerners and their evil ways? Guilt is also a big money spinner.
Give it up, Willis. All these facts just make folks’ heads hurt. As everyone KNOWS, we’re all going to drown if we don’t burn up and die first. You probably don’t even believe in “The Goracle”.
I love African names. I mean, could there be a more euphonious name than “Dikembe Mutumbo”? That’s just poetry.
The euphonious-ness is greatly enhanced by the selective shortening of his full name, of which the attempted pronunciation could conceivably be used as a roadside sobriety test.
Who knew Willis paid so much attention to basketball?
The moment I saw the overhead image, it was obvious this was a case of plain jane erosion.
Rivers move. Curvy rivers become curvier, create islands, then destroy them. The faster the water flow, the faster the erosion.
If anything, higher sea levels in the region would slow the flow of water, which would increase sedimentation, slow erosion and help preserve the fort.
Great post Willis!
Hmmm, shouldn’t that be:
8.97°S, 39.50°E or something? It can’t be both S and N at the same time.
Indeed the wikipedia page confirms it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilwa_Kisiwani
Thirty or forty years ago my now deceased mother-in-law worked for National Geographic as a picture editor. She loved her job. She had a cadre of fussy old academics that questioned the historical accuracy of the minutest detail in every picture they published. If the slightest hair was misplaced she was soon overwhelmed with letters of complaint, sometimes even direct telephone calls a day or two after publication. That attention to accuracy seems to have now been lost by both the published media and academia. It now seems to be totally acceptable to bend the rules if that is what is necessary to obtain/retain your funding, or to maybe just ‘make your point’.
My guess is that when you mix together the right brained ‘true believers’ that now seem to have infiltrated both the media and at least certain area of academia with the quest for ever increasing profits by the published media and ever increasing budgets in academia you wind up completely bastardizing both systems.
Willis
Thanks. Always like your gems.
In case you missed this:
http://www.lethbridgeherald.com/national-news/study-finds-canada-s-arctic-coastline-eroding-faster-than-anywhere-else.html
Good example of spin doctoring, eh? Headline says:
Study finds Canada’s Arctic coastline eroding faster than anywhere else ANYWHERE ELSE ?? Got that? Oops. It goes on to say, “…in the circumpolar world.” Anything for a headline.
Then they slip in a sneaky sentence that states:
While they can’t yet prove it, scientists suspect that gradual washing-away along thousands of kilometres of gravelly northern shoreline is speeding up.
So in reality it is non article, but it makes the front page. Should I be surprised? My local rag is called the Lethbridge Herald. I’ve renamed it, The Left Bridge Herald.
Regards
Clive
Kadaka, the word you were looking for is not euphonious-ness, but euphony.
Hate to be picky, but when I was a kid my dad insisted that I had at least one of his dictionaries to hand to aid both reading and writing. Early training is inescapable.
“The problem is bogus science and, as in this case and far too often, exaggerated or false claims. Once again, a serious climate claim from an internationally respected organization (this time the Global Heritage Network) has been shown to be a complete fantasy … and there’s no amount of better spin or framing or communication that will solve that.”
Accurate and to the point!
A child’s song summarizes it:
“The foolish man built his house upon the sand…. and the walls came atumblin’ down!”