How climate change is taking a toll on Greek monuments

 | Updated: Jun 25, 2019, 07:16 PM IST

For decades there have been efforts to preserve and protect the Acropolis and its monuments, an operation that has been speeded up since the mid-1970s. Here is a look at how one of the most visited archaeological sites in Greece are getting affected.

A view of the Parthenon temple

Even though the Acropolis hill, where the Parthenon stands, is probably Greece's best preserved archaeological site, there are signs that climate change has been increasingly affecting the monuments that stand on the hill.

"The walls of the (ancient) city have more erosion than in the past," Maria Vlazaki, General Secretary in the Greek Culture Ministry, said.

(Photograph:Reuters)

Archaeological site of the Acropolis hill in Athens

The temple of the Parthenon on the rock of the Acropolis, located in the heart of Athens, dates back to the classical period of antiquity - the 5th century BC.

For decades there have been efforts to preserve and protect the Acropolis and its monuments, an operation that has been speeded up since the mid-1970s. But the country has hundreds if not thousands of exposed archaeological sites.

(Photograph:Reuters)

Archaeological site of the ancient Temple of Zeus in Athens, Greece

"Every year, we have more cases... We give more money, unexpected money to protect the walls of the (ancient) cities that had no problems before, to protect the coastal area," Vlazaki said.

The wider Athens area has been hit hard by deadly floods and forest fires over the last decade.

A 2007 forest fire in the Peloponnese peninsula threatened to destroy the temples and stadiums of ancient Olympia, birthplace of the Olympic Games.

(Photograph:Reuters)

Ancient Herodus Atticus theatre as the Parthenon temple

Christos Zerefos, a professor in the Academy of Athens said extreme weather events had become more frequent and the sudden swings from periods of flooding to drought were destabilising the monuments.

(Photograph:Reuters)
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Parthenon Temple seen atop the Acropolis hill, Athens

Speaking on the sidelines of a conference on climate change and cultural heritage, Zerefos said Greece needed better shelter for its monuments, and a monitoring system that would help provide extra protection in case of extreme weather.

(Photograph:Reuters)