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Seagrass meadows—an underwater time capsule for archaeology
admin
2018-10-23
发布年2018
语种英语
国家美国
领域地球科学
正文(英文)
Amphora in a meadow of sea grass (Posidonia oceanica) in the Cyclades in Greece. Credit: Julius Glampedakis

The most beautiful meadows are to be found along the world's sandy coasts: Seagrass.

It lines the seafloor like an enormous carpet. In the Nordics, shallow coastal waters are dominated by the "eelgrass" (Zostera marina).

Seagrass has some important functions, such as removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, and protecting our coasts from , and boosting biodiversity.

But seagrass can do even more than that. An international research project has now documented how seagrass also protects our cultural history.

Our results are published in the journal Ambio.

How seagrass protects archaeology

Numerous archaeological treasures lay just a stone's throw from the coast: Stone Age settlements in Denmark; Phoenician, Roman and Greek shipwrecks with their cargo in the Mediterranean Sea; and more recent wrecks in Australia.

Underwater meadows stabilise the seafloor by dampening wave energy and forming a stabilising network of roots and stems.

They also build up the seabed by capturing remains of seaweed and other particles in mat-like layers, burying deeper sediments and protecting anything buried within them as the seagrass continues to grow.

Seagrass (Posidonia oceanica) in Serifos, Greece with its protective underground structures. Credit: Thanos Dailianis

And they help to provide the right conditions needed to preserve archaeological treasures by locking out oxygen, which might otherwise promote degradation.

And so, the organic and chemical structure of creates a type of underwater time capsule that can encase and protect shipwrecks or Stone Age settlements, for thousands of years.

Treasures lurking in Danish seagrass meadows

In Europe, many settlements were inundated by rising seas during the Holocene – the geological epoch that began after the end of the last ice age, 11,700 years ago, and was characterised by rising sea levels after the ice melted.

With time, these sites became covered in sediments and colonised by seagrass.

Under these meadows today lie a number of exceptional finds. For example, near the Danish island of Nekselø, you can find well preserved wooden fish traps from the early Stone Age. And off the Fyn coast, there are remnants of wood, pottery, and , along with intact burials from the late Stone Age.

All of these are preserved to this day, thanks to seagrass.

Dense mats of seagrass (Posidonia Oceanica) by Los, Greece. Credit: Thanos Dailianis

These archaeological sites provide a unique insight into the life and cultural conditions of the past. And there are many other similar sites in the Danish coastal areas and around the world.

Seagrass as a historic archive

The gradual build-up of the seabed over the millennia provides insights into human activities throughout history. We can also use seagrass as a type of archive that we can dig in to and study the past.

Dates and chemical analyses of the thick deposits underneath seagrass in the Mediterranean (Posidonia oceanica, see the second photo in the gallery at the top of this article), give us a glimpse of how soil was used in agriculture and metal extraction.

Analyses of more recent deposits reveal a drop in lead content, associated with the transition to unleaded fuel.

We should protect seagrass while we still can

But seagrass is not invincible. It is sensitive to poor water quality, physical damage, and heat waves.

Diver investigates remains of a wattle mat from the younger Stone Age preserved under seagrass at Nekselø, Denmark. Credit: National Museum of Denmark

In our study, we document how the loss of seagrass has exposed archaeological sites, including shipwrecks, axe handles, animal bones, and more, representing a loss of cultural history.

Seagrass retains carbon in the seabed, thus counteracting global warming, it protects the coasts by damping the , and promotes biodiversity in our coastal areas.

And so, marine archaeologists and marine biologists are in a race against time to protect vulnerable meadows.

In the last few years, the ability of marine forests like seagrass meadows to dampen and adapt to climate change has led to the development of Blue Carbon strategies – the offsetting of carbon emissions by protection and expansion of marine forests.

I hope that their other role as a protector of archaeology and cultural heritage will further boost efforts to preserve and protect these underwater meadows.

After all, this underwater resource is worth protecting.

Explore further: New analysis shows seagrass meadows in Guam have decreased by 22 percent

More information: Dorte Krause-Jensen et al. Seagrass sedimentary deposits as security vaults and time capsules of the human past, Ambio (2018). DOI: 10.1007/s13280-018-1083-2

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来源平台Science X network
文献类型新闻
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/124846
专题地球科学
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