via Nature Scientific Reports, 13 May 2021: A paper by Huntley et al. on how the oldest rock art in Southeast Asia is undergoing increased degredation due to climate change.
The equatorial tropics house some of the earliest rock art yet known, and it is weathering at an alarming rate. Here we present evidence for haloclasty (salt crystallisation) from Pleistocene-aged rock art panels at 11 sites in the Maros-Pangkep limestone karsts of southern Sulawesi. We show how quickly rock art panels have degraded in recent decades, contending that climate-catalysed salt efflorescence is responsible for increasing exfoliation of the limestone cave surfaces that house the ~ 45 to 20-thousand-year-old paintings. These artworks are located in the world’s most atmospherically dynamic region, the Australasian monsoon domain. The rising frequency and severity of El Niño-induced droughts from anthropogenic climate change (that is, higher ambient temperatures and more consecutive dry days), combined with seasonal moisture injected via monsoonal rains retained as standing water in the rice fields and aquaculture ponds of the region, increasingly provide ideal conditions for evaporation and haloclasty, accelerating rock art deterioration.
Source: The effects of climate change on the Pleistocene rock art of Sulawesi | Scientific Reports
See also:
- Archaeology: Climate change may be accelerating ancient rock art degradation | Eureka Alerts, 13 May 2021
- The climate crisis is irrevocably damaging the world’s oldest cave art | CNN, 13 May 2021
- World’s Oldest Cave Paintings Are Fading—Climate Change May Be to Blame | Scientific American, 14 May 2021
- Disappearing ancient Indonesian rock art | Cosmos, 14 May 2021
- 40,000-Year-Old Rock Art Is Being Destroyed Due to Climate Change | Gizmodo, 14 May 2021
- The ancient art disappearing before our eyes due to climate change | Brisbane Times, 14 May 2021
- Climate change could erase ancient Indonesian cave art | Griffith University, 14 May 2021
- World’s oldest cave paintings ‘are being destroyed by climate change’ | Yahoo, 17 May 2021
- Climate Change Destroys Ancient Art Cave in Indonesia | Al Bawaba, 18 May 2021
- Earliest Art Survived 45,000 Years: Now It’s Peeling Due to Climate Change | Haaretz, 18 May 2021
- Indonesia: Climate change destroying world’s oldest animal painting | BBC News, 19 May 2021
- Climate change destroying some of world’s oldest cave paintings: study | La Prensa Latina, 19 May 2021
- ‘Globally significant’ 40,000-year-old rock art in Indonesia being destroyed by climate change | Channel NewsAsia, 19 May 2021
- World’s oldest cave art, including famous hand stencils, being erased by climate change | LiveScience, 19 May 2021
- Some of the Oldest and Most Revered Cave Paintings in the World Are Under Extreme Threat Due to Climate Change | Artnet, 19 May 2021
- Next up on climate change’s chopping block: cave art | AV Club, 24 May 2021
- Climate change is destroying the oldest cave paintings in the world | Euronews, 26 May 2021
- Explained: How climate change is destroying the world’s oldest cave art in Indonesia | Indian Express, 27 May 2021
- Human history on the verge of being wiped out by climate change | Mail and Guardian, 29 May 2021
- Climate change slowly erasing world’s oldest cave painting – study | RTE, 10 June 2021