Tracking the effects of the long‐term changes on the coastal archaeological sites of the Mediterranean using remote sensing data: The case study from the northern shoreline of Nile Delta of Egypt

Author:

Elfadaly Abdelaziz1ORCID,Abutaleb Khaled12,Naguib Doaa M.1,Mostafa Wael3,Abouarab Mohamed A. R.456,Ashmawy Aiman7,Wilson Penelope5,Lasaponara Rosa8

Affiliation:

1. NARSS, National Authority for Remote Sensing and Space Sciences Cairo Egypt

2. Agricultural Research Council Natural Resources and Engineering (ARC‐NRE) Private Bag X79, 0001 Pretoria South Africa

3. Department of Geography, Faculty of Arts Kafrelsheikh University Kafr El Shaikh 1501 Egypt

4. Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Arts Kafrelsheikh University Kafr El Shaikh 1501 Egypt

5. Department of Archaeology Durham University Durham UK

6. McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Department of Archaeology University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

7. Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities 3 El Adel Abou Bakr St., Zamalek Cairo Egypt

8. Italian National Research Council C.da Santa Loja, Tito Scalo Potenza 85050 Italy

Abstract

AbstractClimate change effects along with anthropogenic activities present the main factors that threaten the existence of heritage sites across the north Nile Delta of Egypt close to the coastline of the Mediterranean Sea. Observing the changes in the landscape close to the archaeological sites is an important issue for decision‐makers in terms of reducing the negative impact of natural events and human activities. The coastal heritage sites are becoming strongly threatened by the rising sea level phenomena that will happen due to global warming. Focusing on the distribution of the archaeological sites, this study aims to detect the areas at risk of shoreline erosion or accretion in the northern shoreline of the Nile Delta. In this study, the changes in the northern shoreline of the Nile Delta were observed and calculated during the last hundred years based on the integration between the old topographic maps from surveys in 1900, 1925 and 1945, optical satellite images captured by Landsat in 1972, 1986 and 2000; Sentinel2 2021; and the Radar SRTM data. The results of this study showed that the changes were enormous with a great shoreline erosion process over the last 121 years recorded along the shoreline in the periods between 1900–1925, 1925–1945, 1945–1972, 1972–1986, 1986–2000 and 2000–2021. The areas eroded were about 5.3, 4.7, 5.6, 8.9, 2.5 and 5.4 km2, respectively. Such negative movements caused the loss of two heritage sites, and the expected changes will lead to the loss of additional heritage sites in the next 500 years. Furthermore, a model was suggested for protecting the coastal heritage sites threatened by the risk of submergence. This study can help the decision‐makers to detect the coastal archaeological sites at risk and create innovative solutions for protecting these irreplaceable heritage sites.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Archeology,History

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