Modelling Resource Values and Climate Change Impacts to Set Preservation and Research Priorities |
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Authors: | Michael Heilen Jeffrey H. Altschul Friedrich Lüth |
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Affiliation: | 1. Center for the Study of Cultural Landscapes (CSCL), Statistical Research, Inc. (SRI), Haymarket, VA, USAmheilen@sricrm.com;3. Coalition for Archaeological Synthesis (CfAS), Rio Rancho, NM, USA;4. Deutsches Arch?ologisches Institut (DAI), Berlin, Germany |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTClimate change impacts will increase in their frequency and severity in the coming decades, resulting in compromised integrity or destruction of thousands of heritage resources. Efforts are needed to identify, record, and study resources that will be affected. To set research and preservation priorities, the vulnerability of resources to climate change impacts and their importance to scientific research, preservation, and other resource values needs to be understood. We advocate a modelling approach which predicts the location, timing, and severity of climate change impacts; identifies resources at risk, their resource values, and opportunity costs; and prioritises research and preservation options based on these assessments. The need for this approach is illustrated with examples from two coastal areas subject to different impacts and hosting different types of heritage resources: the Atlantic coast of Georgia in the United States and the Wismar Bight along the Baltic Sea in northern Germany. |
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Keywords: | Climate change modelling prioritisation vulnerability |
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