Rising
sea threatens Stone Age village Skara Brae
RISING
sea levels are threatening the existence of Orkney’s famous Stone
Age village of Skara Brae, according to an official report
21
October, 201
A
draft management plan for the protection of the World Heritage site
describes coastal erosion as “a threat to the long-term survival”
of the subterranean village.
The
report, compiled by Unesco, Historic Scotland, RSPB, Scottish Natural
Heritage and Orkney Islands Council, says the site is at “significant
risk from a variety of climate-related factors”.
These
include: “Increases in storminess and sea level rise and consequent
increases in coast erosion; torrential rain and flooding; changes to
wetting and drying cycles; and changes to flora and fauna.”
Skara
Brae is believed to be between 4,000 and 5,000 years old and is the
main attraction of Heart of Neolithic Orkney (Hono), which was made a
World Heritage site by Unesco in December 1999. In addition to the
village, the site includes Maeshowe, the Ring of Brodgar, the
Standing Stones of Stenness and other nearby sites.
Unesco
said the monuments “proclaim the triumphs of the human spirit in
early ages and isolated places” and “stand as a visible symbol of
the achievements of early peoples away from the traditional centres
of civilisation”.
For
the past 100 years, the main bulwark against serious storm damage and
erosion to the village has been a specially erected sea wall. The
wall has been undermined by waves over the years and is in need of
major repairs, and archaeologists now fear that rising sea levels may
prove too much for it.
Alice
Lyall, Historic Scotland’s World Heritage Site co-ordinator, said:
“It’s done a really good job, but if there is a sea level rise,
and there is increased storminess – because it is storm events that
concern us in particular – there could be a problem.
“Already,
if you have a north-west wind and a high tide, parts of the site can
be awash. Luckily, so far it has not been parts of the archaeology,
just what used to be a visitor centre hut.”
Julie
Gibson, Orkney’s county archaeologist at the University of the
Highlands and Islands, said: “There are significant threats and
there should be planning to reduce these risks.
“I
don’t know how we would manage a big surge from the sea – they
are very dangerous because they could suck walls out with them as
they retreat.”
Skara
Brae was discovered in the 19th century because of severe weather. In
the winter of 1850 a storm-battered Orkney and a combination of
gale-force winds and extremely high tides stripped the grass from a
large mound, then known as “Skerrabra”, revealing the outline of
a number of stone buildings.
In
1924 another violent storm swept away parts of the monuments,
prompting Edinburgh University academic Professor Vere Gordon Childe
to carry out a fuller investigation into the site.
Gibson
said it was vital to look at ways of reducing the damage caused by
waves, as Skara Brae remains Scotland’s “most vulnerable”
historical site.
She
said the potential for a “catastrophic” loss through storm damage
means Historic Scotland needs to invest in “new heritage” on
Orkney.
Gibson
said: “Under the dunes, to the south of the excavated remains,
there are other parts of the village. We need to continue to protect,
but we have to look at alternatives.
“Two
hundred years from now it’s entirely possible it [Skara Brae] could
be entirely unsustainable – and if we get climate change, and sea
levels rise, then it could be sooner than that. We have to look at
other sites.”
She
said that other Neolithic sites outside the Hono site were under
excavation and causing excitement in archaeological circles.
Gibson
added that opening up other locations would help spread the tourism
load, reducing the impact of traffic through the existing parts and
the potential damage that comes with it.
According
to the latest figures, 46 per cent of people who visit Orkney each
year go to Skara Brae. The number of cruise ships stopping there are
increasing each year, making the site integral to the island economy.
Lyall
said she believes that the site is being well cared for, but added:
““We can’t say ‘in that case it’s fine we don’t have to
keep reassessing’ because things can change.
“We
are not resting on our laurels.
“If
you went back 25 years you would not get many cruise ships stopping
here, but they are increasing year on year, bringing other
pressures.”
Conservationists
have been forced to undo alterations for tourism in the past. A glass
viewing ceiling inserted into the roof on one dwelling during the
1930s had to be closed because it affected the room’s humidity,
damaging the stonework.
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