The Eighth First Climate Refugees

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I’ve written before about the crazy claims of “climate refugees”, there’s a list of posts in the notes below. When I set out to write about bogus climate claims, I find myself in what I call a “target-rich environment”. Crazy ideas on the subject are not hard to find. One of the better sources is National Geographic magazine, which can be depended on to mess up just about any climate story.

Their latest is is about Lennox Island in Canada, and is headlined:

This Canadian Island Is Losing Ground But Not Losing Hope

A tiny island off the Atlantic coast is shrinking as the climate warms and the seas rise. But its indigenous people aren’t waiting for global help: They’re taking action now.

Well, guess what? Just like the situation with the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh “Climate Refugees”, once again we’re not dealing with islands made of rock. Nope. Once again, these poor folks live on nothing more than a shifting pile of mud, silt, and sand, located near the mouth of a river.

GE Lennox IslandFigure 1. Lennox Island, Canada. The large body of land surrounding it is Prince Edward Island

Now, the National Geografique folks say the following:

A generation ago, the island was 1,300 acres; today, it is 1,100. Once, all of its 79 homes–clustered at the southernmost tip, the island’s high point–were comfortably set back from the beach. Today 10 of them are perilously close to the shoreline as the sea reclaims land.

Well, duh … the high point on the ocean is only about 6-7 metres above sea level. The island is made of mud, silt, and sand. It sits in a rivermouth. Anyone who thinks that such an island will NOT erode and change shape over time is a fool … and the Early Asian Immigrants to that area were far from fools.

lennox island aerialFigure 1a. Lennox Island from the air, looking southeast. You can see the low-lying, silt-and-sand nature of the island. The town and the dock are at the south tip of the island, top right.

Now, the earliest immigrants to the area of Prince Edward Island are unknown. It might have been the Mi’kmaq people, they moved to that area a long, long time ago … but you can be sure that they didn’t make their main home on some tiny offshore mud-flat island. With some digging I found a fascinating study calledIndians and Islanders: The Story of the Micmacs of Prince Edward Island. It discusses in detail how Lennox Island became a reservation. Back in the day, the Mi’kmaq lived around the Prince Edward Island area, and they were being forced off of their traditional lands by the encroachment of the newcomers. So the Canadian Provincial Government decided that they should be allocated some land for a reservation. Negotiations began in the late 1700’s. From the cited study, they decided:

A small offshore island would be ideal for such a reservation. Its isolation would prevent the Indians from annoying white farmers, protect them from the evils of liquor and enable them to live in something approximating their accustomed way. The most remote, and hence the most attractive spot was Lennox Island off the northwest coast, 1400 acres in extent. This island had been overlooked in the original partition, for only in 1772 was it attached to Lot 12 and granted to Sir James Montgomery. Fanning wrote Montgomery, who gave his permission for the Indians to reside there, and offered to sell his island for £300.

However, the deal fell through. The slow and sad saga continues:

By the year 1800 several Micmac families were established on Lennox Island. They received regular visits from a missionary, the Abbé de Calonne, who began the lengthy task of persuading them to clear land and plant crops. He had them build a chapel to St. Anne, and Lennox Island became the meeting place for the whole tribe every July 26 on the Saint’s day. In 1806 the Abbé petitioned the British government to buy the island for the Indians, “as being the aboriginal owners they had a right at least to have some portion” of their ancestral homeland. Manual labour was now their only hope, Calonne argued, and it would take at least a generation to convert them to farming; the process was hard enough without the knowledge that the improvements they were making were on someone else’s private property. Nothing came of this initiative.

A few Indians maintained permanent residence on Lennox Island, and by 1841 there were twenty five acres cleared, mostly for potatoes. It was not the most attractive place for potential farmers. The trees were mainly fir and spruce, and the soil light, sandy and of inferior quality. Between five and six hundred acres were barrens and swamp; the most attractive feature was the adjoining marsh, which yielded hay for those who had livestock. The Indians had none. The hay and timber proved to be an irresistible attraction to nearby whites who took what they wanted for fodder and fuel despite the protests of the Indians.

Lennox Island, apart from its chapel, was of little importance to the majority of Indians who continued their accustomed way of life as best they could. Only two or three families, principally the Francis family, lived there, while the rest continued to move around, hunting and fishing with diminishing success.

Finally in the 1870s the island was purchased from the owners and deeded as an indian reservation. Curiously, the money was raised privately, it didn’t come from the Province. The study continues with a description of a report of the survey of the property:

His first report arrived somewhat tardily in January 1875. The survey showed that the property contained 1320 acres, of which 1100 were optimistically described as excellent for agriculture;

Now, of course the NatGeo gets this history all wrong. They say:

The Mi’kmaq, among the original inhabitants of Canada’s Atlantic provinces, have lived on Lennox Island, slightly north of Prince Edward Island, for thousands of years.

As you can see from the above, this is balderdash. The Mi’kmaq likely had seasonal hunting camps on Lennox Island, but they have only inhabited it year-round since the end of the 19th century … and then only because they had little other choice.

Now like I said above, the local folks in any given area are rarely fools, which is why the Mi’kmaq didn’t have their main village on some god-forsaken flat pile of shifting sand and silt in the middle of a river. This is the third northern village I’ve written about which is 1) eroding, and 2) has people living on it only because the Later Melanin-Deficient Immigrants forced the Early Asian Immigrants to move there, and 3) is claimed to be a victim of “climate change”. See the posts below for the other unlucky northern contestants, which were Shishmarev, Newtok, and Kivalina. You’d think that at some point the media would wise up … but noooo.

However, I was not satisfied with just the history. Obviously something was happening to the island, some parts were eroding. But as hard as I looked, I couldn’t find any modern measurements of the area of the islands. I was suspicious of the claim that the area of the island had gone from 1320 acres, a precise figure, to “1,000 acres”. Sounded too vague to be true. So I decided to start by looking at the modern dimensions of the island as determined from Google Earth, so I could get an exact value for the claimed “1,000 acres”. I got the image of the island, and I digitized the boundary and the roads. Figure 2 shows that result:

Lennox island 2014Figure 2. Closeup of Figure 1, showing just Lennox Island itself. The dark blue line shows the outline of the island, and the light blue line shows the principal roads. The south end of the island is the highest end at 7 metres (23 ft) up behind the town. 

With that came my first surprise. I worked to the scale that can be seen at the lower left of Figure 2. What I found was that the area enclosed by the blue polygon is not 1,100 acres as the NatGeo folks claim, nowhere near that.

In fact, the blue line encloses an area of 1,307 acres. So somebody didn’t do their homework. The island hasn’t gone from 1,320 acres to 1,100 acres. Instead, the area of the island has hardly changed at all.

But that still left the question of what was going on. Because we know something is going on, the islanders report that the south end of the island around the town is being eaten away, and I believe them.

So I got some old maps of the island to compare with the modern situation. The earliest map is from 1880. It is only available for $19.95, but I used a free blurred version. Figure 3 shows that map with the modern outline overlaid on it.

lennox island 1880Figure 3. 1880 map of Lennox Island overlaid with the modern roads, listing the area as 1320 acres. SOURCE

This map was republished in the Atlas of the Province of Prince Island in 1925, using the identical outline but showing the further subdivision of the land into more parcels. It gives a clearer view of the changes in the outline of the island.

lennox island 1925Figure 4. 1925 map, which is a faithful copy of the island shoreline of the 1880 map with updated details and lot changes. Blue lines as in Figures 2 and 3.

There are several clear differences in the shape of the island between 1880 and today. The eastern (right-hand) side has lost a lot of what is described as “Peat Bog” in the 1880 map. The easternmost projecting point has been eroded away entirely, as has the southernmost. On the other hand, the northernmost (top) part of the island has grown by accretion of more mud, silt and sand on the north side, and has moved northwards while losing land on the south side.

Since 1880, the shape of the island has been changing. It is eroding away in some areas and it is accreting in others. It is not disappearing, the total area is little changed.

So let’s be clear about this. What is happening to Lennox Island is happening to thousands of such low-lying offshore river-mouth islands around the world. This change in the outline of the island is totally expected. It is totally predictable. It is the norm. It would only be surprising if such changes did not happen to such an uncompacted pile of sand, silt, and mud.

And the alterations in shape are unending. Just like a meandering river which never maintains the same shape over time, but continually changes its path forever, these islands are similarly constrained to endlessly change in order to persist. They are mere hesitations in the ceaseless flow of silt and soil to the sea, transient islands which are always and perpetually gaining a bit here and losing a bit there.

So I feel compassion for the Mi’kmaq people, shuffled off like so many northern peoples to live on a wholly unsuitable and unstable chunk of dirt. You’d have to be tough and resourceful to live there at all, and seeing the ocean eating away at the island must be both frustrating and frightening.

But that’s the nature of such islands, and it has nothing to do with “climate change”, whatever that might mean. There has been no increase in storms. There has been no acceleration in the rate of sea level rise. What we’re seeing is not a climate drama. It is just another sad tale of the Later Melanin-Deficient Immigrants conquering the Early Asian Immigrants, with the often tragic concomitant upheavals lasting up to the present time.

However, all is not lost. We know a whole lot more these days about coastal engineering than we used to. If I lived there I’d get in touch with someone like Holmberg Technologies or Moffatt & Nicholl. Both of them have worked all over the world, and both of them deal with this kind of problem all the time. I’d get quotes from both companies and see what they thought could be done, and for how much money.

Then I’d dun the Canadian Government to foot the bill, not because of any nonsense about CO2, but because the Mi’kmaq got such a bunk piece of land for their reservation in the first place.

But hey, what do I know, I was born yesterday. All I can do is wish the good Mi’kmaq folks all the best of luck with their northern lives and their lovely island.

My warmest regards to all,

w.

My Usual Request: If you disagree with me or anyone, please quote the exact words you disagree with. I can defend my own words. I cannot defend someone’s interpretation of my words.

My Other Request: If you think that e.g. I’m using the wrong method on the wrong dataset, please educate me and others by demonstrating the proper use of the right method on the right dataset. Simply claiming I’m wrong doesn’t advance the discussion.

The Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Climate Refugees:

The Sixth First Climate Refugees 2013-07-02

For years now, folks have searched desperately for the “fingerprints” of human climate change. These are things that are supposed to reveal how and where humans are affecting the climate. One of these fingerprints, which is alleged to be a sure and certain harbinger of the thermal end times, is…

Breaking News! Seventh First Climate Refugees Discovered! 2013-08-09

Well, my heart fell when I saw the recent BBC article which proudly proclaimed that the people of Kivalina were slated to become “America’s first climate change refugees” … Figure 1. The Alaskan native village of Kivalina. SOURCE: BBC My heart fell for three reasons. First, because once again we…

5 1 vote
Article Rating
134 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
QV
December 26, 2015 9:58 am

On December 22nd, Leonard Doyle of the “International Organisation for Migration”, claimed, in a general discussion of migrants:
“Many people are moving now because of climate change”
I asked him for evidence and he sent me the following link:
http://www.iom.int/news/iom-welcomes-inclusion-climate-migrants-climate-migration-draft-paris-cop-agreement
I replied saying that it was mainly predicted migration and that merely talking about “climate change” (Micronesia) didn’t constitute evidence.
Pretty soon, all migration will be attributed to “Climate Change”.

QV
Reply to  QV
December 26, 2015 10:00 am

Sorry, I forgot to say that the original quote was on the BBC, “World At One”, programme.

Auto
Reply to  QV
December 26, 2015 11:57 am

QV
BBC
Yeah – Right.
Here is the only double positive adding up to a negative in – I have read – all the world’s languages . . . . . . .

Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
December 27, 2015 12:14 pm

Willis, thanks for this post and also the reminder that well-accepted and believed scientific theories, or consensus, can be discredited by one truth-seeker who is as free as humanly possible from biasing influences (i.e. Darwin and the coral atolls).
It seems that cheap, safe, relatively clean and abundant (for now) fossil fuels have created the monster of misplaced environmentalism in a rather ironic way that doesn’t get expressed much.
In the past, and in a Dawinian manner, the cream of human scientific thought had risen to the top, leaving us with giants like Darwin, Einstein, Newton, etc. Now science appears more and more to be immune from this Darwinian ascension of giants to the tops of their fields. Instead, oil and coal have made things so easy for us all in the western world, that people who have no real aptitude for science are easily able to pursue their worldview and call it science, without risking their ability to eat and stay warm. It seems to me that most modern climate scientists would have been, sailors, farmers, laborers and tradesmen (all honorable pursuits) scraping out a modest living in the past partly because of their lack of scientific thought, mathematical knowledge and application of theory to observation and experiment. Now almost any Joe-blow can obtain government financing to pursue nonsense, unrelated to the real world, and make a very comfortable living being called a scientist as long as their output supports the CAGW narrative.
Ironically, if oil and coal hadn’t made it so easy for us all, we’d have a lot less of this modern pseudo-science (aka cargo-cult science). Getting back to “survival of the fittest” in science will likely only happen if the funding source for science is fundamentally changed. We’ve clearly ignored one of our giants in leadership (Eisenhower) to cause our present science dilemma.

Curious George
Reply to  QV
December 26, 2015 10:27 am

Mr Doyle is protecting his job. Doing his job, which consists of protecting his job.

Adrian
Reply to  QV
December 27, 2015 2:27 am

No it’s a real issue.
As someone who lives in Scotland and has to cope with freezing temps snow etc. I am waiting for Mauritius to offer me climate refugee status, although to show how desperate I am I would accept an offer from the Maldives.

asybot
Reply to  Adrian
December 27, 2015 12:53 pm

The Maldives? Wow you must be REALLY desperate. That place is a floating garbage pile! Try Belize!

DHR
December 26, 2015 10:43 am

Tide gauge records thousands of sites all over the world are available from the Catalog Viewer, at PMSML.org There are data for two sites on Prince Edward Island, one going back about 115 years. It shows a slow steady rise of about 2 mm/year with no evidence of acceleration in recent years. The other begins in the 1970’s and suggests a change of about 1 mm/year to date.

Bear
Reply to  DHR
December 26, 2015 11:27 am

Wrong url for the website. I think you mean http://www.psmsl.org.

JJM Gommers
Reply to  DHR
December 26, 2015 12:19 pm

Erosion will go on and with a rise of 1-2 mm/year, although this is a small rise, the impact increases. The energy of a wave is exponential (second power) with the height.

Reply to  JJM Gommers
December 26, 2015 1:30 pm

JJM Gommers wrote that an increase in sea level will result in an increase in wave energy. Not so …
Wikipedia says that wave power is proportional to the wave energy period and to the square of the significant wave height.
In physical oceanography, the significant wave height (SWH or Hs) is defined traditionally as the mean wave height (trough to crest) of the highest third of the waves (H1/3). Nowadays it is usually defined as four times the standard deviation of the surface elevation
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Significant_wave_height

Reply to  JJM Gommers
December 26, 2015 7:05 pm

JJM:
Meaning, that you either did not read Willis’s article above or that you did not comprehend it.
Just like marshes, bayous, coastal islands, coral outcrops, sandspits, and many other current and wind driven soil accumulations worldwide; estuary islands accrete as well as erode.
All of all the climate false propaganda regarding sea level rise implies great doom, instead you should be very grateful that the perfectly normal 1-2mm/year sea level increase is still rising. The truly scary part of sea level rise is that sea levels are definitively plateaued. Sea level plateaus eventually decline.
You will not like it when sea level begins dropping.comment image

Reply to  DHR
December 26, 2015 1:00 pm

Since Prince Edward Island is said to be subsiding (http://www.climateforum.ca/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/CCF-Issues-SeaOfChange_3.pdf), does that mean the sea level rise was even less than that, or has the data set been adjusted?

Reply to  DHR
December 26, 2015 1:13 pm

‘A generation ago, the island was 1,300 acres; today, it is 1,100’
Ok, let’s see. 25 years, 2mm/year. That sounds like 5cm to me. Basically, National Geographic is saying that 15% of the island’s surface was lying less than 5cm above water, and has now disappeared. *shakes head*

Reply to  Alberto Zaragoza Comendador
December 27, 2015 3:28 pm

Willis, above, identified the island as currently being about 1307 acres.
It was the “National Geografique folks say the following:” that claim 1,100 acres remain. No verification by the allegedly geographical society, just blind acceptance of rumors.

taz1999
Reply to  DHR
December 27, 2015 8:14 am

It was probably linked from this site somewhere, but I recall NASA self claiming refugee status at the cape (Canaveral) due to sea level rise. Interestingly the cape itself is a barrier island and the lighthouse was moved back over a mile in 1894 due to shifting sand of the point it was originally constructed on.
So far as I know 60 odd years and no launch pads have been harmed by rising tides.

December 26, 2015 10:48 am

Pro tip for future real estate investors, if your candidate property isn’t any higher elevation than a neighboring area identified as “Low Point”, that might be a red flag.

December 26, 2015 12:09 pm

References to “climate change” and sea level rise causing impacts on people and wildlife are becoming increasingly common.
I have noted that such references are now tossed into discussions almost as an aside…not discussed, or qualified, or explained in any way…just stated is if such assertions are factual.
To the average uninformed and scientifically uneducated person, such constant lies must now be indistinguishable from reality.
“A lie repeated often enough will become the truth” is not literally true but, in the minds of the gullible and credulous, it might as well be.
Thank you for the post Willis. Very educational as always.

zemlik
December 26, 2015 12:10 pm

I’d like to migrate somewhere where the seas are full of Bass, Cod and Sole, the shore completely covered in mussels and other shellfish, Just a few feet inland I’d like hundreds of rabbits and deer in the woods and in the sky flocks of plump pigeon and partridge.

zemlik
Reply to  zemlik
December 26, 2015 12:19 pm

that is, of course, how it used to be before there were too many people.

bit chilly
Reply to  zemlik
December 26, 2015 5:08 pm

currently the east coast of the uk would fit that bill. my last trip cod fishing from the shore a few weeks ago i had 26 .plenty cod in the north sea. if you move to the yorkshire coast there are also plenty bass and i think sole can be caught in the humber estuary and a few beach marks south of the humber.

Reply to  zemlik
December 26, 2015 7:33 pm

Interesting.
Rabbits and deer prefer or thrive in different environments. An abundance of one implies a lack of the other.
Right now, in America deer are more abundant than at any previous known time. The description used is deer are overabundant. My current hunting license allows taking of six deer total during the current license year.
Striped bass and sea bass are abundant right now. Codfish are abundant in some locales, deficit in others. Sole, well, flounder in the Americas is also quite abundant.
Most of the problem with people believing there is a serious deficiency is they are hunting or fishing in the wrong places or at the wrong times.
In America all wild game is managed or conserved for the public. Market gunners depleted many species during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Ordinary hunters lobbied their representatives and managed to get several laws passed that directly fund conservation through taxes on hunting equipment. Forget wwf, sierra fools, and many others; the vast bulk of money actually spent on wildlife conservation comes from hunters.
Fishermen noticed the wildlife improvements and sought similar laws for fishing, which were passed for freshwater fish. Saltwater and most anadromous fish were not included in the protection though they often benefit from some of the conservation monies collected.
Saltwater and anadromous fish are still liable to the market fishing concept where virtually every last fish is worth at least a few cents, even if only for cat food or vitamin E oil. Serious market controls are necessary to protect sufficient spawning biomass and prevent population declines; only some nations have introduced the necessary controls within their borders. Internationally? Absolutely not.

commieBob
December 26, 2015 12:15 pm

Then I’d dun the Canadian Government to foot the bill, not because of any nonsense about CO2, but because the Mi’kmaq got such a bunk piece of land for their reservation in the first place.

The Canadian government has a fiduciary obligation to the people covered by the Indian Act (who, unlike their American cousins, don’t want to be called indians). That means that there is a strong case that the government might have to fix the situation. On the face of it the situation looks better now than it did with the Harper Government. That said, Trudeau Jr. is a politician …

maureen
Reply to  commieBob
December 26, 2015 7:08 pm

Harper would have fixed the situation but he would have done in a way that would not have pleased the Indian Industry, in other words no commissions, no inquiries, no millions spent on supporting activists to discover the root causes. Remember the pre built homes he sent to the northern reserve with the hungrer striking overpaid chief!

asybot
Reply to  maureen
December 27, 2015 2:34 pm

That situation was an emergency( about the pre fab homes) brought on by a few very corrupt Native “leaders”. A situation that is all to common on a number of reservations in Canada, Frankly it is a dirty not so little “secret” that every Government in Canada be it at the Provincial, Municipal or Federal level has been hiding for a century. To blame in just Harper is hogwash! There are great examples of where the Natives have succeeded though and THEY should be an example for ALL of us, given the right leaders the native community has as much if not more potential than the (as Willis so aptly puts it) the “melanin deficient” population of today. [Check out the story of the Osoyoos Indian (sorry) Band, BC Canada as an example].

asybot
Reply to  maureen
December 27, 2015 2:37 pm
TomRude
December 26, 2015 12:19 pm

The story was already milked by the CBC back in September…
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-edward-island/climate-change-threatens-p-e-i-s-lennox-island-1.3231674
Obviously, there is money to be made in claiming climate refugee status…

John F. Hultquist
December 26, 2015 12:27 pm

Good post. Thanks.
These stories in the Nat. Geog. and elsewhere cause me to wonder if these writers have ever visited a coastal island or the floodplain of a big river. Have they ever gotten out of the office and gotten their feet wet?
Note the current flooding in SA, specifically near Asuncion, Paraguay. Below link says 200,000 evacuated but that number is surely plucked from the big round number bin.
they’re sleeping on improvised tents

John F. Hultquist
Reply to  John F. Hultquist
December 26, 2015 12:30 pm

Meant to ask, why not in the tent?

Reply to  John F. Hultquist
December 26, 2015 1:09 pm

When did the ‘geographic’ part become so irrelevant at National Geographic?

David Becker, Ph.D.
December 26, 2015 12:40 pm

Willis,
Have you sent this information to the responsible editors at National Geographic? I would be interested in their responses.

TW
December 26, 2015 12:59 pm

Minor note, but where you write, “Well, duh…the high point on the ocean….”, I think you mean, high point on the island.
You are so right about coastal islands, coral atolls, etc. This was 7th grade science when I went through school, how can this ignorance of actual science persist so in these news reports? It’s astounding.

Dreadnought
December 26, 2015 1:25 pm

Another great take-down of the CAGW hoaxers, Willis – nice work!

Marcus
December 26, 2015 1:33 pm

I am the only real ” Climate Refugee “…. I live in Canada, and it’s too dang cold for my liking !! So when do I get my money ????

Juan Slayton
Reply to  Marcus
December 26, 2015 1:58 pm

Marcus, you must be the only one left up there. All your neighbors are down here in Arizona.

Latitude
Reply to  Juan Slayton
December 26, 2015 2:14 pm

Florida….

Francois GM
Reply to  Juan Slayton
December 26, 2015 5:47 pm

Mexico…

David Smith
Reply to  Juan Slayton
December 27, 2015 4:20 am

NW London
(Working for the banks in the City)

Reply to  Juan Slayton
December 27, 2015 3:36 pm

Dam I ended up up northwest of Fort Nelson up the Helmit Road klick 130 -48c last night or is it day can never tell up here ;>) all yhe non sun melting every dam thing ;>)

Mike the Morlock
Reply to  Marcus
December 26, 2015 3:08 pm

Marcus
Please remember to turn the lights off when you leave, (and join the rest of us in the sunny warm U.S. south)
Michael in northern AZ.

richardX
Reply to  Marcus
December 26, 2015 3:54 pm

But, Marcus, I too am a real “Climate Refugee”. I moved around 1,100km north from Melbourne, Australia to escape the impending little ice age.

Pamela Gray
Reply to  Marcus
December 27, 2015 10:44 am

Most of us are around because of a die off during the last ice age. Only the hardy survived, and many of those hardy individuals lived on the inhospitable margins of the ice sheets, indeed a cold and dangerous place. Those of us who have inherited that hardiness will survive the next ice age as well.

asybot
Reply to  Marcus
December 27, 2015 2:42 pm

@ Marcus, did you leave any heating oil around ? (leave an address). I’ll gladly pump it out and wait to prune my peaches apricots and cherries and grapes in the spring!

December 26, 2015 2:08 pm

Thanks for the in-depth study of this latest boondogle from National Geographique. It is wonderful to see how these fairy tales fall apart so rapidly when exposed to the harsh light of day.

bit chilly
Reply to  ntesdorf
December 26, 2015 5:11 pm

+1 , another excellent demolition job by willis. national geographic is basically a comic these days. content is so poor on occasion one issue can be skim read in the dentists waiting room.

Phaedrus
December 26, 2015 2:46 pm

Back in the early nineties I helped carry out shallow underwater surveys on submerged Indian villages on the Floridian West Coast. Clearly water levels must have been lower than today. More importantly the archaic west coast extended perhaps as much as 100 miles from it’s present coast line.
Living in Florida sees every major storm taking a decent chunk of the beach away only for it to reappear somewhere else. There are good ideas and stupid ones to try to prevent these loses but as Matthew 7 24-27 tells use …. don’t build on sand.

Bruce
December 26, 2015 2:51 pm

Willis,
Great sleuthing as usual. However, I do have one concern about the use of google imagery to define surface area. It is always possible that the image was not taken from directly overhead and, if taken from am angle, the island’s perspective might be somewhat shortened or lengthened, depending on the angle of the satellite, which could make a calculation of surface area a bit suspect. This is easy to see if you take a look at big cities in google earth. Most often tall buildings will be seen from one side or the other and appear angled. However, I suspect this is something you have already considered.
Bruce

commieBob
Reply to  Bruce
December 26, 2015 3:45 pm

Great sleuthing as usual.

Willis embodies nullius in verba. Just because folks say stuff, it doesn’t mean we should believe them. Somebody should hold them to account. Willis does that.

I do have one concern about the use of google imagery to define surface area.

I bet he’s within 10%. In any event, someone will have to answer the point he has raised.

Bruce
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
December 26, 2015 6:54 pm

Your comparison to the topographic map from Don’s link (below) certainly validates your conclusion derived using the google earth map. Nicely done!
The reason I thought of perspectives and projections was partly due to having seen this recently.
http://thetruesize.com/

John F. Hultquist
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
December 26, 2015 9:23 pm

For this post, Willis has a “good enough” method.
The issue has been studied. Two sites from the producers of ArcGIS:
Georeferencing a raster dataset
Georeferencing and coordinate systems

skeohane
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
December 27, 2015 6:14 am

I took a survey of a neighborhood of multi-acre lots of which I own one, and volunteered to update it with the present location of wells for water rights appropriation. Taking Google Earth imagery, and overlaying on the survey was a joke. GE was off 20-30%, ie. 2-300 feet in a thousand. This is mountain property, but after seeing that, I’m not impressed with their spacial placements.

Don K
December 26, 2015 2:57 pm

Another nice article Willis. One possible problem. It’s not clear how good older maps were. Here in Vermont, the state made an effort to draw geologic maps of the state’s rather complex bedrock geology in the late 19th century. At least one of the resulting reports commented sourly on the poor quality of the government’s (USGS?) topographic maps which apparently sometimes mislocated features like peaks and ridges by a goodly portion of a mile. I wouldn’t be terribly surprised to find that Canadian maps of the time weren’t all that good by modern standards. It’s not that they lacked the tools back then to do highly accurate maps. But they may have lacked the funding and/or desire to do so.

Don K
Reply to  Don K
December 26, 2015 4:05 pm

Addendum: If it’s of any use, there is a topo map of Lennox Island on-line at http://www.mytopo.com/maps/. Click the Canada button above the map, type “Lennox I” and select the Lennox Island, Prince County, Nova Scotia line. I don’t think it’ll tell you anything you don’t already know except to confirm that much of the “shoreline” looks to be salt marsh. Not a lot of relief there apparently. No clue I can see as to the age of the mapping except that it does show roads, so it’s presumably 20th or 21st Century.

Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
December 26, 2015 7:43 pm

Willis:
You are correct.
Surveying as practiced back in colonial days used a chain for length measurements. When surveyors and mapmakers got involved, the resulting maps were quite accurate and could be relied upon for business and navigating.

Don K
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
December 27, 2015 12:02 am

onsider that they were the basis of the legal description of the plots of land shown on the maps.

You’re correct for much of North America Willis, but the first settled areas — the 13 colonies, Louisiana, Vermont, and very likely Quebec and the maritimes didn’t originally use property lines surveyed in the modern fashion. They used “metes and bounds” distances and directions relative to local landmarks like big trees, big rocks, etc. That seems to have worked about as badly as you’d imagine and I think most were probably resurveyed in the past century. But there’s a good chance that your older maps date from an earlier, less universally precise, era. I don’t see any benchmarks indicated on the topo map, but I’m not sure that Canadian maps flag them. On US maps they are indicated by a small x. There’s also the issue of where one maps the “shore” in a marsh. AFAICS small differences in mapping practices rather than erosion and depositation could account for much of the rather limited differences in the maps you are working with. … or not.

December 26, 2015 3:08 pm

Great work

December 26, 2015 3:19 pm

Meanwhile, the U.S. Interior Department (motto: No climate deniers here!) is spending $1.2 million to teach Indian tribal leaders how to prepare for a changing climate.
http://freebeacon.com/issues/feds-spend-1-2-million-for-climate-change-liaisons-for-native-american-tribes/

Reply to  verdeviewer
December 26, 2015 6:28 pm

According to http://www.climateforum.ca/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/CCF-Issues-SeaOfChange_3.pdf the sea has been rising around Prince Edward Island for the last 8000 years. (Clearly due to First Nations’ fossil fuel use. /sarc) I think these people probably have a better idea of how to cope than the government does.

TheLastDemocrat
Reply to  verdeviewer
December 26, 2015 9:27 pm

-No, the Dept of Interior is not spending 1.2 mill to save these people – they are spending 1.2 mill to get them dependent on the government, to convince them that all of their problems are caused by the prevailing cultural hegemony in order to provoke marxist anger toward the prevailing culture, and to divert some money to the re-election campaign coffers of the incumbents who put all of this in place.

December 26, 2015 3:42 pm

Let us spare the Mi’Kmaq any more pity and condescension. These thoroughly modern people should be manumitted by the Canadian government; the Indian Act, like AGW, is too profitable for some and too cosseting for others to give up.

Bazza McKenzie
December 26, 2015 3:49 pm

Thanks Willis. It’s a pleasure to see analytical work done well, drawing on all the relevant information instead of on convenient fabrications.

December 26, 2015 3:53 pm

I’ve often had to come in out of the cold.
Am I a “Climate Refuge”?
If so, I’ve been one all my life. I’ve even had to come in out the rain!
(Those times I knew enough to do so.)

December 26, 2015 4:51 pm

Just some clarification.
First, a ‘river’ in PEI is a kind of tidal basin with salt water currents that change direction twice a day. The kind of ‘river’ found elsewhere, with fresh water running across land and down to the ocean, isn’t really a thing there.
Second, the island is most likely sandstone (because PEI is a big sandstone rock sitting in the ocean) and not silt (because you need an actual river for silt, not a tidal bore) or possibly just plain sand, since the entire north shore of PEI is basically a classic barrier island geography, always changing.
None of this changes the premise of this article, just clarifies a few things.
The inhabitants, both indigenous and later, are all aware that the entire province is slowly eroding into the sea. Landmarks I knew as a child are long gone along with the seabirds that used to hang around the now-defunct fisheries. Things change. There’s no reason to believe this has anything at all to do with climate.

Reply to  bregmata
December 26, 2015 7:55 pm

Silt is a fine layer of soil.
It really doesn’t matter whether it is salt or fresh water. The source is the same, when water stops moving, silt settles out. The fact that the soil is not good for crops hints at more sand than soil and perhaps residual salt. Especially since it is mentioned the salt marshes grew good crops of fodder.
Many of the bayous down along the Mississippi river and Gulf coast are much as you describe where the tide flows in and out. Near the Mississippi river, the water in the bayous may be brackish.

Doug
December 26, 2015 4:53 pm

I remember a similar issue on a bluff above Lake Erie. An entire street eroded away and the houses gradually fell into the lake. I guess if they had built in such a stupid spot on the ocean they could blame climate change.

tom
December 26, 2015 4:59 pm

You would have thought that “National Geographic” would have done a historical survey as part an parcel of any description of a change in geographical boundaries. Sigh. Nice work Willis.

December 26, 2015 6:09 pm

Sort of like a shifting dune. Depletion of sediment on the south facing beaches, and the silt is slung around and deposited on north facing beaches.

Mike Bromley the Kurd
Reply to  Donald Kasper
December 26, 2015 10:14 pm

As a sedimentologist, I always enjoy the buffoonery and hopelessly conjectural machinations of those who are not sedimentologists. National Geographic….is not a sedimentologist…or geomorphologist, or any other pertinent -oligist. They hear that sea level is rising due to climate change, and go out looking for the sparse evidence to support alarm. And there you have it. As usual, history….human and geological….is ignored.
For me, it’s a quick glance at the picture at the top: a direct perception, “Shifting sediments will happen here” and the rest of the story is moot.

Don K
Reply to  Mike Bromley the Kurd
December 27, 2015 1:03 am

Mike
I’d certainly agree that the structure NorthEast of Lennox Island looks to be your basic barrier island. I wouldn’t be so sure about Lennox Island itself. It could easily be a low lying Permian sandstone ridge covered by a thin verneer of sandy soil with an admixture of organic material. Soils in New England and the Maritime provinces are often quite thin with bedrock (“ledge” in the local lingo in Vermont and New Hampshire) annoyingly close to the surface. I suppose the way to tell would be to ask the locals about how deep their wells are and what’s encountered when they are drilled. FWIW, here’s a link to an arial picture of the village. http://atlanticadaptation.ca/pei-communities-lennoxisland It’ll probably mean more to you than to me.

Mike Bromley the Kurd
Reply to  Mike Bromley the Kurd
December 27, 2015 1:20 am

The barrier island is also a baymouth bar. Lennox might indeed be cored by some pesky Permian clastic sediment; or it might be an artifact of earlier Holocene sedimentation. Its red color is certainly derived from the source sediment for most of PEI’s pink beaches…Permian fluvial and deltaic sediments. Ledge or no (that term is used in the Maritimes as well), this island is doing what these islands do….produce alarm-fodder for white-knuckled hand-wringers in far away NatGeo & SciAm copy-rooms.
…and marvelous debunk-fodder for out intrepid mariner, w. Happy New Year, Willis!

Don K
Reply to  Mike Bromley the Kurd
December 27, 2015 2:02 am

One final comment, then I’ll shut up as I probably should have several posts ago. It crossed my mind that sea ice is an issue with the bridge to the mainland on the other side of the island. So it possibly is on the North coast as well. I wouldn’t be surprised that big chunks of solidly frozen water being sloshed around by waves might hasten erosion a bit. But fortunately after — what is the date now? … 2020? that won’t be a problem any more. The island will be saved by global warming. At least for a century or five until the sea engulfs it. (AR5 puts the likely worst case sea level rise in this century at about a meter). https://www.ec.gc.ca/glaces-ice/default.asp?lang=En&n=BBD52602-1

TheLastDemocrat
December 26, 2015 9:37 pm

Here is another woe-is-me story of “climate refugees:”
I came across it because Columbia Journalism Review noted the story as one of the best science stories of 2015:
“Landlocked Islanders,” by Krista Langlois (as you might guess – science credentials cannot be found)
http://www.cjr.org/opinion/six_great_pieces_of_science_writing_you_may_have_missed_this_year.php
http://www.hakaimagazine.com/article-long/landlocked-islanders

garymount
December 26, 2015 9:38 pm

Willis, you say “So the Canadian Provincial Government decided that they should be allocated some land for a reservation. Negotiations began in the late 1700’s.”, however, P.E.I. didn’t join the Canadian federation until 1873. What’s up with that?

Don K
Reply to  garymount
December 27, 2015 12:45 am

It’d be better for a Canadian to answer your question. They’d be more likely to get it right. But the short answer is that there were more than 13 British crown colonies in Atlantic North America. And each had its own local government. The colonies North of the present US-Canadian border slowly federated to become present day Canada. Indeed, Newfoundland and Labrador didn’t join up until 1949. see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Confederation#Colonial_organization.

John F. Hultquist
December 26, 2015 10:03 pm

Just for fun. “Kennessee” and the Walker Line.
There are lots of issues with boundaries in the USA; and elsewhere.
The Kentucky and Tennessee line is famous.
http://tngenweb.org/campbell/hist-bogan/surveyor.html
http://www.tnhistoryforkids.org/geography/bordernorth
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Now for land that moves:
Washaway Beach, WA
http://www.washawaybeach.com/gallery/tide08.html
Washaway Beach is, well, washing away. The photo above is number 8 in a series by Erika Langley. Google Earth will locate Washaway Beach, WA for you. A couple of years ago the erosion took a few houses and so was much in the news, but this has been an on-going problem for many years.
The name is not new.

eyesonu
December 26, 2015 11:38 pm

Willis,
From the variety of the things you research and the depth that you do so, no one can ever claim that you have a one-track mind!
Interesting post as always.

thingadonta
December 27, 2015 3:09 am

“A tiny island off the Atlantic coast is shrinking as the climate warms and the seas rise. But its indigenous people aren’t waiting for global help: They’re taking action now.”
Standards of journalism. I count at least 6 mistakes in 2 sentences.
1. island isnt shrinking
2. island isnt shrinking due to climate warming or sea rising, as implied.
3. people are not truly indigenous, they are transplanted there from elsewhere.
4. no one is expecting ‘global help’ later for a non problem, as implied.
5. no one is taking meaningful ‘action’ for a non problem, and
6. they are not taking action ‘now’ rather than later from ‘global help’, as implied.
It is likely that any such land-related issues would be undertaken by local and regional government, not global government.
It’s also arguable the island isn’t really ‘tiny’, and
that it isnt ‘off the Atlantic coast’, being in a delta.
So that’s perhaps 8 or 9, give or take.
Somebody inform Nat Geo, who used to be interested in geography and not fantasy.

Admin
December 27, 2015 4:19 am

VERY well done Willis. This is exactly why I don’t subscribe to National Geographic anymore. When they get history, geography, hydrology, and climate change all wrong in a single article, there’s no point to the magazine’s existence.

BusterBrown@hotmail.com
Reply to  Anthony Watts
December 27, 2015 4:54 am

(Note: “Buster Brown” is the latest fake screen name for ‘David Socrates’, ‘Brian G Valentine’, ‘Joel D. Jackson’, ‘beckleybud’, ‘Edward Richardson’, ‘H Grouse’, and about twenty others. The same person is also an identity thief who has stolen legitimate commenters’ names. Therefore, all the time and effort he spent on his comments is wasted, because I am deleting them wholesale. ~mod.)

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  BusterBrown@hotmail.com
December 27, 2015 5:08 am

What downfall? The WSJ bucked the trend in falling circulation before 2010 and has gained since then:
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/27/business/media/27audit.html?_r=0
It was 2.1 million then and is 2.4 million now. It’s thriving while the Leftwing rags are diving.. It’s also making money, since it charges for its hundreds of thousands of digital subscriptions.
Newscorp ownership has been a boon.

BusterBrown@hotmail.com
Reply to  BusterBrown@hotmail.com
December 27, 2015 5:13 am

(Note: “Buster Brown” is the latest fake screen name for ‘David Socrates’, ‘Brian G Valentine’, ‘Joel D. Jackson’, ‘beckleybud’, ‘Edward Richardson’, ‘H Grouse’, and about twenty others. The same person is also an identity thief who has stolen legitimate commenters’ names. Therefore, all the time and effort he spent on his comments is wasted, because I am deleting them wholesale. ~mod.)

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  BusterBrown@hotmail.com
December 27, 2015 5:32 am

I’ve subscribed to it for decades. Obviously the vast majority of subscribers don’t agree with your subjective, unobjective opinion, since circulation is growing, swimming against the tide for newspapers in general.
Why am I not surprised that actual data don’t interest you?

BusterBrown@hotmail.com
Reply to  BusterBrown@hotmail.com
December 27, 2015 5:38 am

You didn’t notice the change?
..
(Note: “Buster Brown” is the latest fake screen name for ‘David Socrates’, ‘Brian G Valentine’, ‘Joel D. Jackson’, ‘beckleybud’, ‘Edward Richardson’, ‘H Grouse’, and about twenty others. The same person is also an identity thief who has stolen legitimate commenters’ names. Therefore, all the time and effort he spent on his comments is wasted, because I am deleting them wholesale. ~mod.)

BusterBrown@hotmail.com
Reply to  BusterBrown@hotmail.com
December 27, 2015 5:43 am

You didn’t notice the change?
..
(Note: “Buster Brown” is the latest fake screen name for ‘David Socrates’, ‘Brian G Valentine’, ‘Joel D. Jackson’, ‘beckleybud’, ‘Edward Richardson’, ‘H Grouse’, and about twenty others. The same person is also an identity thief who has stolen legitimate commenters’ names. Therefore, all the time and effort he spent on his comments is wasted, because I am deleting them wholesale. ~mod.)

BusterBrown@hotmail.com
Reply to  BusterBrown@hotmail.com
December 27, 2015 5:51 am

Gloateus Maximus:
.
(Note: “Buster Brown” is the latest fake screen name for ‘David Socrates’, ‘Brian G Valentine’, ‘Joel D. Jackson’, ‘beckleybud’, ‘Edward Richardson’, ‘H Grouse’, and about twenty others. The same person is also an identity thief who has stolen legitimate commenters’ names. Therefore, all the time and effort he spent on his comments is wasted, because I am deleting them wholesale. ~mod.)

Gloateus Maximus
Reply to  BusterBrown@hotmail.com
December 27, 2015 7:04 am

Your opinion doesn’t matter. The fact that its circulation has grown under Murdoch shows he’s right and you’re wrong. No surprise because he’s best at what he does.
The WSJ still covers business. How is finance not relevant to business? The fact that it now has a bigger sports section apparently has helped it succeed.
What the Bancrofts think also doesn’t count. I wouldn’t still pay for it if it didn’t provide the info I want at a price I’m willing to pay.

BusterBrown@hotmail.com
Reply to  BusterBrown@hotmail.com
December 27, 2015 7:29 am

“The WSJ still covers business.”
….
(Note: “Buster Brown” is the latest fake screen name for ‘David Socrates’, ‘Brian G Valentine’, ‘Joel D. Jackson’, ‘beckleybud’, ‘Edward Richardson’, ‘H Grouse’, and about twenty others. The same person is also an identity thief who has stolen legitimate commenters’ names. Therefore, all the time and effort he spent on his comments is wasted, because I am deleting them wholesale. ~mod.)

Reply to  Anthony Watts
December 27, 2015 2:56 pm

Sadly, my in-laws renewed the NatGeo subscription they gave me for Christmas last year. The latest issue with the shrinking Arctic ice is a doozy.

Ed Wolfe
December 27, 2015 5:38 am

45 year subscriber to NG dropped them last year due to articles like this

Craig Loehle
December 27, 2015 6:30 am

I remember visiting a coastal Georgia island years ago. This island migrates north. At the South end, tree stumps are sticking out of the beach. At the North end, a hotel that had been built on the beach was how hundreds of meters from the beach after a single storm dropped millions of tons of sand. I bet the hotel owners were not happy. This idea of stasis is just so naive.

John F. Hultquist
Reply to  Craig Loehle
December 27, 2015 10:51 am

We visited Jekkyll Island (late 1960s or early 1970s) and have lots of 35mm color slides (somewhere). All the processes of barrier islands are well developed. We also visited the Okefenokee Swamp, believed to have formed behind coastal dunes or an offshore barrier island. That elevated land is called Trail Ridge and the Swamp is west of that, about 40 miles from the Atlantic. The ridge of sand and gravel extends southward to near Lake Okeechobee in Florida. These are great places to study natural history.
Like others above – we no longer subscribe to National Geographic nor to Scientific American.

December 27, 2015 6:45 am

Perhaps the Murdock Media empire , which now owns National Geographic, will “improve” the Magazine?

rogerknights
Reply to  Ed Chombeau
December 27, 2015 7:34 pm

Not likely; NG this year hired as its new head the head of NPR, a raving alarmist.

brianfrenchtoronto
December 27, 2015 8:13 am

Lennox Island residents are hardly “northern” Indians . PEI is one of North America’s warmest and most pleasant summer resorts, with the warmest waters north of Virginia in the summer. They live in a paradise.

Marcus
Reply to  brianfrenchtoronto
December 27, 2015 9:13 am

I visited P.E.I as a child and it was an awesome playground. I only problem I had was that no one warned me that the tide had gone out for almost a mile…I thought I was standing at the shore line on a little hump of sand playing with these nasty looking tube worms..Then the tide came back in…really fast ! Luckily I could run the mile a little faster on account of being “scared shitless ! ” Ah memories….LOL

Dennis Mitchell
December 27, 2015 8:26 am

Much like the sincerity of fabulous wealth from a Nigerian prince’s email, the perishing island sea level rise disaster scam stories are designed for those folks either scientifically ignorant or, worse, unethically opportunistic. Mr. Eschenbach does some basic fact checking( which any honest publication should have already done) and quickly and easily disarms the alarmism with the overtly obvious explanation this phony crisis is the same old normal non-rock island activity caused by routine currents and /or subsidence. Can it be these pseudoscience modern day dime novelists be so lazy? Or, could it be they are just so greedy knowing perpetuating the myth pays far more than telling the truth? Who really knows what is in their hearts? How many times does this sea level boogeyman need to be exposed before integrity begins to seep back into general publishing?

Samuel C. Cogar
December 27, 2015 8:41 am

I’ve written before about the crazy claims of “climate refugees”,

The State of Florida has, in the past few years, been subject to a vast influx of Climate Refugees.
To wit:

Florida passes NY as third largest state at 19.9M people
Orlando Sentinel – December 23, 2014
Census figures released Tuesday show Florida passed New York as the nation’s third largest state with an estimated population of 19.9 million. New York, now fourth, has 19.7 million.
Frey says the milestone caps a decades-long trend of northern migration to the South.
“It’s a symbol of a half-century of Snowbelt to Sunbelt growth,” Frey said.
Among other Southern states, North Carolina passed Michigan as the ninth largest state and Georgia, ranked eighth, passed the 10 million mark.
Excerpted from: http://touch.orlandosentinel.com/#section/-1/article/p2p-82378148/

Kirkc
December 27, 2015 8:42 am

Willis. Before sending to natG… The map label is 1520 and not 1320. Go back and zoom on the source you provided. This means there is some scale issues and more missing land than you suggest. Or an error in the original survey/map marking?

Marcus
Reply to  Kirkc
December 27, 2015 9:20 am

That’s a Canadian 3…

Kirkc
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
December 27, 2015 12:49 pm

Willis, May I send you my results back channel? I have no idea how to add pictures to a reply. Then again, I have no idea how to contact you either. It is most certainly 1520 acres.

Marcus
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
December 27, 2015 2:01 pm

Willis, trust me, it’s a 3..I ran into the same problem with Canadian documents while doing my Canadian family’s Genealogy…

Marcus
Reply to  Willis Eschenbach
December 27, 2015 2:05 pm

Willis Eschenbach
December 27, 2015 at 11:44 am ………..
” Unfortunately, the original that I’m working from is blurred ’cause I’m not wealthy enough to waste $20 on the full-res map “.
Willis, you blew all that ” Big Oil Money ” already ?? I thought all us skeptics were rich oil barons now !! LOL

Brian H
December 27, 2015 10:54 am

‘Minds me of the stupid drive to stop flooding in Bangladesh. Which IS a river delta. No flooding, no delta!

u.k.(us)
December 27, 2015 12:54 pm

Surveyors nowadays with the help of precision instruments and GPS like to keep the errors down to about a 1/4 “.
That is in the horizontal, vertical can be a more difficult proposition.
(local gravity mostly).
I imagine those old-timers could easily measure things to the nearest foot when necessary, or nearest 10 feet when it wasn’t critical.

December 27, 2015 1:40 pm

People should understand and respect the laws of physics, the laws of nature, including…. erosion.

Kirkc
December 27, 2015 2:28 pm

Willis,
Thanks for the lesson in wordpress. Here goes.
Ok, so I grabbed the picture from you source. I first blew it up to make it as clear as possible and then did a screen grab.
I also took the time to measure the original map pixels (dimensions provided at the source) and determined that the max length of the island was about 12,470 feet (give or take)comment image?dl=0
I did a transparent overlay using Google Earth Pro so I could also measure the acreage using polygons.
I set the height to the 12,470 foot length and rotated so the magnetic north was aligned (about 18.5 degrees).
BTW: I checked the magnetic change over the last 200 years for this local and its within about 1/2 degree so close enough.
Not entirely sure if the map was scaling correctly for width, so I adjusted slightly to get the required 1520 acres as called out.
Here is the old map overlayed with the red line marking a best guess at shoreline.comment image?dl=0
And below you can see the 2012 version with the outline in Blue. This worked out to 1360 acres and you can see where the missing bits are and where a bit of reclaim is going on.comment image?dl=0
and now the current blue placed on the old original mapcomment image?dl=0
Some sanity checks for location… There are some old trails and corners in the roads that align fairly well with existing roads. Majour peat bogs are also fairly well represented. interesting that the south shore is fairly well aligned except for the Cemetery and point that has washed into the sea.
I’m agreeing totally with your original comments about this being the shifting sands of a river delta and is in no way related to any sea-level rise. I just wanted to point out that the areas do seem to align within a small margin of error.
Best,
Kirk

Marcus
Reply to  Kirkc
December 27, 2015 2:52 pm

Well, I stand corrected … or have you been ” adjusting ” the data ? LOL

Marcus
Reply to  Kirkc
December 27, 2015 2:55 pm

I get the feeling one report included the large beaches and the other did not ! That’s my story and I’m stickin’ to it !!

Pamela Gray
Reply to  Kirkc
December 28, 2015 9:52 am

Fascinating crowd sourced investigative writing.

u.k.(us)
December 27, 2015 3:05 pm

There is something that just draws me to maps.
Maybe it is that old gene, when making plans to surround the gazelle herd.
Or outflank the other tribe.
Maps drawn in the dirt.
There is something about maps that fascinates me.

kevin kilty
December 27, 2015 3:37 pm

QV provided a link to an article speaking about Nicholas Hulot, Special Envoy to the Prime Minister for Protection of the Planet. Beyond the gaseous title, a Mr. Hulot? Really? Perhaps Jacques Tati could have invented such an absurdity, but if he had it would be funny.

Bear
December 27, 2015 4:07 pm

I’m wondering how many more cases of this are out there. A similar story of Smith Island in the Chesapeake Bay was written awhile ago. The article pointed out that some of the cemeteries have had bodies coming out of them due to the rising waters.Tide gauges in the area go back little more than a hundred years and show about a 3-4 mm change in sea level in the area. Couldn’t find any maps online that might give an indication of how the island might have changed over the years but it’s basically a little more than a mud flat (one foot a century is probably going to have a negative effect but it’s been going on longer than global warming, er climate change). I wonder if freighter traffic in the Bay as well as dredging and subsidence have had any effect on the area also.

Gary Pearse
December 27, 2015 7:23 pm

Good piece of journalistic research of a kind not practised or likely taught anymore. You fill a remarkable eclectic vacuum, Willis.
Cell phone typing. I haven’t read the other comments but I am sure someone from the area has remarked on the genocide visited upon these people by melanin deficient forbears. They were hunted down to the last person in Newfoundland and fared not a lot better in the rest of the Maritime provinces.
I’m sure if the feckless ‘researchers’ at the terminally I’ll natgeo knew this, their story would have been a lot juicier. Note it’s an org which has the misnomer ‘geographical’ unabashedly in its name, but don’t expect them to understand the geog of coastal estuaries and their sandspits and bars.

Chris Edwards
December 28, 2015 9:11 am

I wonder if the Zulu were the first recorded climate refugees? Thir rampage down through Africa ( so i read) was initiated by the Sahara eating up their homeland and forcing them south away from the encroaching sand, in to conflct with the tribe there! This would coincide with the LIA and the loss of CO2 killing off the plant life in marginal areas the opposite of what we see now with recovering levels! Ant thoughts??

Editor
December 29, 2015 7:43 am

The map is not the territory.

December 29, 2015 10:51 am

willis –
wonderful exposé – so obvious and straightforward that even a science journalist coulda/shoulda done it

JohnKnight
December 29, 2015 2:28 pm

You’ve turned a throwaway bit of propaganda into a fascinating cartography, geography and history lesson, Willis . . Thank you.

john harmsworth
December 30, 2015 11:07 am

Equipped with this new map, the native inhabitants of the island will be able to wade out of the submerged area and move toward the accreting area. Perhaps something similar could be done for places such as New York to prevent the death by drowning of millions of innocent people by water levels rising by 2mm per year! If they see their current location to be in the map area depicted as wet and their feet feel “squishy”, they could relocate to an area perhaps 2 feet away where there is no water. Should I send this suggestion to Homeland Security or the mayor of New York?