Climate
Change Threatens 30 U.S. Landmarks: Science Advocacy Group
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[May 21, 2014]
By Curtis Skinner
(Reuters) - Climate change is threatening
U.S. landmarks from the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor to the
César Chávez National Monument in Keene, California with floods, rising
sea levels and fires, scientists said on Tuesday.
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National Landmarks at Risk, a report published by the Union of
Concerned Scientists, highlighted more than two dozen sites that
potentially face serious natural disasters. They include Boston's
historic districts, the Harriet Tubman National Monument in Maryland
and an array of NASA sites including the Kennedy Space Center in
Cape Canaveral, Florida.
"The imminent risks to these sites and the artifacts they contain
threaten to pull apart the quilt that tells the story of the
nation's heritage and history," Adam Markham, director of climate
impacts at the union, a non-profit organization for science advocacy
in Washington D.C. and the study's co-author, said in a statement.
The report is not slated for publication in a scientific journal,
said Brenda Ekwurzel, senior climate scientist who co-authored the
report. It said that reducing carbon emissions could minimize the
predicted risks posed by climate change.
The issue of climate change or global warming and its causes are
being debated in the United States with splits along party political
lines and disagreement about the extent to which human development
is to blame.
Jamestown, Virginia - the first permanent English colony - could be
completely inundated due to rising sea levels, and the nearby Fort
Monroe, "will become an island unto itself within 70 years," Markham
said.
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In the western United States, rising temperatures have led to an
increase in wildfires by melting winter snowpacks earlier, leaving
forests drier for longer, the report said.
Among California's 20 largest fires since 1932, a dozen have
happened since 2002, the report said.
An unrelated report published on Monday showed that the California
drought has cost thousands of jobs and $1.7 billion to farmers in
the state's Central Valley [ID:nL1N0O6015]. Governor Jerry Brown has
partly blamed climate change for the drought.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in New York; Editing by Barbara
Goldberg and Grant McCool)
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