Lewis Smith, Environment Reporter
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Maps are having to be redrawn as global warming and man’s use of rivers alter the shape of countries and continents around the world.
More changes than ever before are being recorded by cartographers as they attempt to keep track of the impact people have on the environment.
In the four years since the last edition of The Times Comprehensive Atlas of the World map-makers have had to redraw coastlines, lakes and the routes of rivers.
Construction of new homes and industrial plants is also having a visible effect on the world as towns and cities expand to concrete over the countryside.
Las Vegas in the United States has undergone striking changes and urbanisation in Africa and Asia is advancing rapidly. Next year is forecast to be the first in history in which more people live in urban areas than in the country.
Inland lakes and seas have seen some of the biggest changes as water from rivers is diverted to feed crops and urban populations.
Lake Chad in Africa has shrunk 95 per cent since 1967 and the Aral Sea in Central Asia has contracted by 75 per cent in 40 years. Similarly, the Dead Sea is 82 feet (25 metres) lower today than it was 50 years ago.
So much water is extracted from the Yellow River in China that it can dry out so much in the summer that it fails to reach the sea, a situation exacerbated by global warming. Sediment levels have changed so radically that it has changed the shape of the coastline where the river meets the sea.
In Bangladesh the effects of climate change, which is said to have contributed to sea level rises and caused heavier monsoons, have eaten away at the low-lying coast.
“We can literally see environmental disasters unfolding before our eyes,” said Mick Ashworth, editor-in-chief of the atlas.
He said many of the revisions to the 12th edition of the atlas, published today by Collins, are a result of cartographers being “more aware of large scale environmental changes”, including global warming.
“It’s a question of keeping on top of the changes,” he said. “Awareness of the changes is definitely increasing.”
While many of the current revisions are a result of better information about what has taken place, cartographers expect atlases in the future to require considerable changes from sea level rises caused by global warming.
In the Pacific Ocean the Marshall Islands, Tokelau, Tuvalu and Vauata are among the areas of land expected to vanish as sea levels rise, as are the Maldives in the Indian Ocean.
A new feature of the atlas is the identification of ghost towns, which are marked on the maps as “abandoned”.
Among these are Plymouth in Montserrat, which was abandoned because of volcanic eruptions from 1995-7. Others are Bodie in the US, one of the Californian goldrush settlements, and Kolmanskop in Namibia, a diamond mining town.
Cartographers are keeping a close on on Shishmaref in Alaska because it is forecast to become the first US settlement abandoned because of the impacts of climate change. The break-up of sea ice has left the village more exposed to storms and the sea is advancing at a rate of ten feet (3m) a year.
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A few people seem to think that people who believe in global warming are "dumbos". But the fact is that the Earth did experience a period of global cooling, which was caused by chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) depleting the ozone layer and causing a hole through which heat could escape. However, CFCs were banned soon after their introduction and replaced with hydrocarbons, which separate when they combust and produce CO2. This increase in CO2 filled up some of the hole in the ozone layer but it also thickened the atmosphere, and added to the greenhouse effect in a process that we now know as global warming.
Do your research. Then join those who already have.
Justin, Adelaide, Australia
What you dumbos don't seem to realise is that Global Warming and Global Cooling are natural cyclical events due to the nature of the construction of the the planet and the way it develops.Some people have found ways to either make money out of it [ carbon trading etc. ] or to have their fifteen minutes [ all manner of experts ] , or both [ governments jumpiing on the bandwagon ]. With the population of the earth increasing as it is, we obviously have to manage our resources better.That is just plain common sense. Less not More should be in everybody's mind all the time.
Josh Martin, Oxford, Great Britain
K .Becher, London, and David, Newcastle. There is one other point that is relevant to the water levels and quite possibly other changes.
It is being suggested that the Earth has moved on it axis and has rotated out of position by 3 degrees.
ATFlynn, Norwich, Norfolk
This article cites a number of different land use issues-- deforestation, urbanization, and irrigation among them--and then confuses their effect with that of increased greenhouse gas emissions. What a strange and ultimately useless conglomeration of ecological problems it lists. The mess the Soviets made of the Aral Sea is not going to lead to the disappearance of the Maldives.
Frank Lee, Washington, District of Columbia, USA
Brian Neill.
Would you really expect them not to mislead the viewers?
Neil N. Salmon, Ashley, England
None of the facts reported in this article have anything to do with global warming and climate change except one. Not even the author claims otherwise if you read his text and not just the headline. The one exception is sea level rise that endangers low-lying coastlines and islands. This is indeed going to happen on a large scale if climate change projections are correct. Nothing unusual really, though. Sea level changes have happened all the time. Otherwise Britain wouldn't be an island, now would it?
K Becher, London,
C'mon Fred Calder-Smith and get real! Much of this supposed effect of global warming is pure hype. (And I'm not from the US!) To use shrinking lakes as evidence for GW is the worst kind of science. For example, the decline in the Aral Sea since the 1960s is almost entirely the down to the diversion of water from its two main feeder rivers for irrigation! The same applies to the Dead Sea in respect of excessive water extraction upstream. Once a band wagon gets rolling, its hard to stop!
David, Newcastle, England
I am amazed you don't have a hundred posts from Americans claiming global warming is all in the mind. Come on guys, we count on you!
Fred Calder-Smith, Twickenham, UK
The Aral Sea's diminishment was primarily caused by diversion of feeding rivers to irrigate Russian farming areas.
"Climate change" effect on the reducing Aral Sea is minimal. Your representative on TV News this morning misled the viewers when he implied "climate change" was a major cause of the reduction of the Aral Sea.
Your explanation giving percentage figures of the relevant causes will I am sure prove interesting.
PC has a lot to answer for!
Brian Neill, Belfast,