
Why Is The Historic Egyptian City Of Alexandria Crumbling? Study Explains
The Egyptian port city of Alexandria is crumbling, with buildings collapsing due to rising sea levels, a study has found. The historic city, known for being the birthplace of Cleopatra and housing the ancient Library of Alexandria, has witnessed 280 buildings collapsing in the past 20 years, owing to coastal erosion.
More than 7,000 buildings are currently at risk of collapsing, according to the study published in the journal Earth's Future. Between 2014 and 2020 alone, 86 buildings completely crumbled, and 201 partially collapsed across the 2,300-year-old city, resulting in 85 deaths.
"Collapses correlate with areas undergoing chronic and severe shoreline erosion and sea level rise, accelerating seawater intrusion in coastal aquifers," the study highlighted.
For the study, scientists collected data through site visits, government reports, news archives and statements from private construction companies. Afterwards, they combined satellite imagery with historical maps from 1887, 1959 and 2001 to track shoreline movement.
Additionally, the researchers analysed isotopes in soil samples to examine the effects of seawater intrusion. They measured isotopes like B7, whose higher levels indicate stronger, more stable soil, while lower levels suggest erosion.
The crumbling is caused by seawater intruding into the groundwater under the city. As the saltwater moves inland due to rising sea levels, it increases groundwater levels beneath buildings and erodes the soil.
"The true cost of this loss extends far beyond bricks and mortar. We are witnessing the gradual disappearance of historic coastal cities, with Alexandria sounding the alarm. What once seemed like distant climate risks are now a present reality," study co-author Essam Heggy, a water scientist at the University of Southern California's Viterbi School of Engineering.
The scientists have proposed a nature-based solution to combat coastal erosion and seawater intrusion. They suggest creating sand dunes and vegetation barriers along the coastline to block encroaching seawater and prevent seawater intrusion. This way, the groundwater levels will not be pushed into building foundations.
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NDTV
3 days ago
- NDTV
Why Is The Historic Egyptian City Of Alexandria Crumbling? Study Explains
The Egyptian port city of Alexandria is crumbling, with buildings collapsing due to rising sea levels, a study has found. The historic city, known for being the birthplace of Cleopatra and housing the ancient Library of Alexandria, has witnessed 280 buildings collapsing in the past 20 years, owing to coastal erosion. More than 7,000 buildings are currently at risk of collapsing, according to the study published in the journal Earth's Future. Between 2014 and 2020 alone, 86 buildings completely crumbled, and 201 partially collapsed across the 2,300-year-old city, resulting in 85 deaths. "Collapses correlate with areas undergoing chronic and severe shoreline erosion and sea level rise, accelerating seawater intrusion in coastal aquifers," the study highlighted. For the study, scientists collected data through site visits, government reports, news archives and statements from private construction companies. Afterwards, they combined satellite imagery with historical maps from 1887, 1959 and 2001 to track shoreline movement. Additionally, the researchers analysed isotopes in soil samples to examine the effects of seawater intrusion. They measured isotopes like B7, whose higher levels indicate stronger, more stable soil, while lower levels suggest erosion. The crumbling is caused by seawater intruding into the groundwater under the city. As the saltwater moves inland due to rising sea levels, it increases groundwater levels beneath buildings and erodes the soil. "The true cost of this loss extends far beyond bricks and mortar. We are witnessing the gradual disappearance of historic coastal cities, with Alexandria sounding the alarm. What once seemed like distant climate risks are now a present reality," study co-author Essam Heggy, a water scientist at the University of Southern California's Viterbi School of Engineering. The scientists have proposed a nature-based solution to combat coastal erosion and seawater intrusion. They suggest creating sand dunes and vegetation barriers along the coastline to block encroaching seawater and prevent seawater intrusion. This way, the groundwater levels will not be pushed into building foundations.


Time of India
28-05-2025
- Time of India
What? The Great Pyramid doesn't just have four sides, there's more to it
The Great Pyramid of Giza has long been one of the most iconic symbols of ancient Egypt and human potential. It has stood the test of time by standing still on the Egyptian desert sand for the last 4500 years and has attracted generations of scholars, explorers, and tourists worldwide. The timeless grandeur and detailed geometric design of the marvel have made many researchers call it a masterpiece of symmetry and engineering. Traditionally, the pyramid has been understood to have four sides, and each a perfect triangle converging to a point at the summit, reflecting the architectural brilliance of ancient Egyptian builders. But what if that perception was incomplete? Recent discoveries have begun to change the basis of how we view the Great Pyramid, telling that it may hold secrets that went unnoticed for centuries. Far from being a simple four-sided structure, new evidence suggests the pyramid actually has a more complex design, one that subtly strays far from first impressions. This discovery doesn't just challenge how we see it. It also leaves some mind-boggling questions on the viewer about the level of scientific and architectural excellence achieved by the ancient Egyptians. The Great Pyramid of Giza, also known as the Pyramid of Khufu, is the only wonder that still stands today among the 'Seven Wonders of the Ancient World'. The Great Pyramid of Giza has eight sides! For centuries, scholars believed the Great Pyramid of Giza had four perfectly flat faces. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Giao dịch CFD với công nghệ và tốc độ tốt hơn IC Markets Đăng ký Undo This understanding held until 1940, when British Egyptologist Flinders Petrie made a surprising observation. Under specific lighting conditions, Petrie noticed a subtle indentation running vertically down the center of each face. These depressions, though nearly invisible from ground level, indicated that the faces were not flat, but slightly concave. This suggests that the pyramid doesn't have just four sides, but eight. Each face is divided into two shallow planes by these concave curves, which are only visible under particular light conditions or from above. The Great Pyramid is even more complex in design, which is not seen in other pyramids of its kind. What are these concave faces ? The idea of concave faces was explored further in 1975 by Egyptologist IES Edwards in his book The Pyramids of Egypt. He wrote that the blocks were set in such a way that they sloped inward, creating the impression of a central depression. These findings were reinforced by a 2023 study published in Archaeological Discovery. Researcher Akio Kato wrote, 'The Great Pyramid at Giza is known to have an amazing character of concavity that each of its four faces is slightly indented along its central line, from base to peak. ' Kato's analysis highlights how this feature, invisible from typical vantage points, was likely intentional, suggesting an advanced understanding of geometry, optics, and perhaps even symbolic design. The ancient Egyptians' ability to execute such precision reinforces their reputation as master builders and visionaries. The Great Pyramid, it turns out, is not just an ancient wonder, but a puzzle still revealing its secrets.


Hindustan Times
24-05-2025
- Hindustan Times
UV vision, fire sensors, a QR code for love?: A quick look at how animals see the world
It's easy to make the mistake of assuming that all animals experience the world as we do. The truth is that, beyond our version of reality lies a world of eyes that see differently, sounds we cannot hear, and colours we can barely imagine. Reindeer, for instance, can see ultraviolet light. (Imagine what the Aurora Borealis looks like to them.) They actually rely quite heavily on this ability. Because both animal urine and lichen absorb UV light, the reindeer can use their special receptors to detect the former, which helps them avoid predators and court potential mates, and find the latter, so they can stay alive in winter. Both appear as sort of anti-beacons: dark blotches against bright, reflective snow. Birds and insects use ultraviolet light to feed and find the right mate too. But here there is a flip side: their ability to see UV affects how they are hunted. Spiders, for instance, spin UV-reflecting webs that double as prey magnets. Insects fly straight to them, possibly mistaking them for the natural bright spots on nectary flowers. Out in the oceans, meanwhile, the mantis shrimp is seeing its coral world in colours so rich, it has 16 to 21 different photoreceptors (for our three). These photoreceptors are vital because of how colour is lost in water. Even as little as two metres under the surface, the reds vanish first, their wavelength absorbed most easily. They are followed by the yellows and greens. This is why coastal waters often appear blue. Amid all this, the mantis shrimp's unusual eyes help it see its way to food and away from predators. Birds, meanwhile, would appear to have among the most vibrant views of the world. European starlings and hummingbirds let ultraviolent light guide social interactions and courtship to such a degree that they are believed to choose their mates based on patterns in plumage that we will never see. A sort of QR code, almost, for love. From vision on to sound, the insect world is full of bizarre and brilliant adaptations in this arena. Grasshoppers, crickets and locusts, for instance, have some of the tiniest ears on the planet. These, as you may remember from school, are perched on their knees. (Some insects have ears on their antennae, some on their abdomens. Hearing is so crucial to survival among these creatures that they have evolved to essentially put the ears wherever they can best do their job.) Perhaps the strangest 'extra-sensory' ability I've ever heard of, though, is the heat-detection organ in fire-chasing beetles. These black bugs that look like something out of an Egyptian tomb are found in Central and South America, South-East Asia and the Caribbean. They can sense high heat (as from a forest fire) from more than 100 km away. They do this using specialised infrared sensory-pit organs on their chests. Snakes have such organs too, and it helps them frame thermal images of their surroundings, and find warm-blooded prey in the dark. The beetle, however, is cast in a different mould. It doesn't track forest-fire signals so it can fly in the opposite direction (as surely anything should?). No. It — and tell me this isn't straight out of a horror movie — tracks these signals so it can fly straight to them. Nathan Schiff, an entomologist and researcher with the US Department of Agriculture's Forest Service, says he has often turned up to the scene of a blaze to find thousands of these beetles already there. 'I never see a swarm making their way to a fire. I have walked 2 km to a fire and not seen a single beetle along the way. But got to the burnt and there are thousands,' he says. There's more. They make their way to flames in this manner because they prefer to mate and lay their eggs in the charred remains of scorched trees. This way, they can be reasonably sure the eggs will be safe from predators, and from plant defences. Adults die after mating. The eggs hatch as larvae, pupate a year later, and a new generation of the beetles eventually leaves the charred forest. And so what seems absurd, unnatural even, turns out to be just another way of being. There's a lesson in there somewhere, for our own vast and varied species. (Rupsy Khurana leads science communications and outreach at the National Centre for Biological Sciences, Bengaluru)