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Section: ANNALS OF SCIENCE
The curse of Akkad.
The world's first empire was established
forty-three hundred years ago, between the Tigris and Euphrates
Rivers. The details of its founding, by Sargon of Akkad, have come
down to us in a form somewhere between history and myth. Sargon--Sharru-kin,
in the language of Akkadian--means "true king"; almost certainly,
though, he was a usurper. As a baby, Sargon was said to have been
discovered, Moses-like, floating in a basket. Later, he became cup-
bearer to the ruler of Kish, one of ancient Babylonia's most
powerful cities. Sargon dreamed that his master, Ur-Zababa, was
about to be drowned by the goddess Inanna in a river of blood.
Hearing about the dream, Ur-Zababa decided to have Sargon
eliminated. How this plan failed is unknown; no text relating the
end of the story has ever been found.
Until Sargon's reign, Babylonian cities
like Kish, and also Ur and Uruk and Umma, functioned as independent
city-states. Sometimes they formed brief alliances--cuneiform
tablets attest to strategic marriages celebrated and diplomatic
gifts exchanged--but mostly they seem to have been at war with one
another. Sargon first subdued Babylonia's fractious cities, then
went on to conquer, or at least sack, lands like Elam, in
present-day Iran. He presided over his empire from the city of
Akkad, the rains of which are believed to fie south of Baghdad. It
was written that "daily five thousand four hundred men ate at iris
presence," meaning, presumably, that he maintained a huge standing
army. Eventually, Akkadian hegemony extended as far as the Khabur
plains, in northeastern Syria, an area prized for its grain
production. Sargon came to be known as "king of the world"; later,
one of his descendants enlarged this title to "king of the four
corners of the universe.”
Akkadian rule was highly centralized, and
in this way anticipated the administrative logic of empires to come.
The Akkadians levied taxes, then used the proceeds to support a vast
network of local bureaucrats. They introduced standardized weights
and measures---the gur equalled roughly three hundred litres--and
imposed a uniform dating system, under which each year was assigned
the name of a major event that had recently occurred: for instance,
"the year that Sargon destroyed the city of Mari." Such was the
level of systematization that even the shape and the layout of
accounting tablets were imperially prescribed. Akkad's wealth was
reflected in, among other things, its art work, the refinement and
naturalism of which were unprecedented.
Sargon ruled, supposedly, for fifty-six
years. He was succeeded by his two sons, who reigned for a total of
twenty-four years, and then by a grandson, Naramsin, who declared
himself a god. Naram-sin was, in turn, succeeded by his son. Then,
suddenly, Akkad collapsed. During one three-year period, four men
each, briefly, claimed the throne. "Who was king? Who was not king?"
the register known as the Sumerian King List asks, in what may be
the first recorded instance of political irony.
The lamentation "The Curse of Akkad" was
written within a century of the empire's fall. It attributes Akkad's
I demise to an outrage against the gods. I Angered by a pair of
inauspicious oracles, Naram-sin plunders the temple of I Enlil, the
god of wind and storms, who, in retaliation, decides to destroy both
him and his people:
For the first time since cities were built and
founded,
The great agricultural tracts produced no
grain,
The inundated tracts produced no fish,
The irrigated orchards produced neither
syrup nor wine,
The gathered clouds did not rain, the
masgurum did not grow.
At that time, one shekel's worth of oil was
only one-half quart,
One shekel's worth of grain was only one-
half quart…
These sold at such prices in the markets of
all the cities!
He who slept on the roof, died on the roof,
He who slept in the house, had no burial,
People were flailing at themselves from
hunger.
For many years, the events described in
"The Curse of Akkad" were thought, like the details of Sargon's
birth, to be purely fictional.
In 1978, after scanning a set of maps at
Yale's Sterling Memorial Library, a university archeologist named
Harvey Weiss spotted a promising-looking mound at the confluence of
two dry riverbeds in the Khabur plains, near the Iraqi border. He
approached the Syrian government for permission to excavate the
mound, and, somewhat to his surprise, it was almost immediately
granted. Soon, he had uncovered a lost city, which in ancient rimes
was known as Shekhna and today is called Tell Leilan.
Over the next ten years, Weiss, working
with a team of students and local laborers, proceeded to uncover an
acropolis, a crowded residential neighborhood reached by a paved
road, and a large block of grain-storage rooms. He found that the
residents of Tell Leilan had raised barley and several varieties of
wheat, that they had used carts to transport their crops, and that
in their writing they had imitated the style of their more
sophisticated neighbors to the south. Like most cities in the region
at the time, Tell Leilan had a rigidly organized, state-run economy:
people received rations--so many lines of barley and so many of
oil—based on how old they were and what kind of work they performed.
From the time of the Akkadian empire, thousands of similar potsherds
were discovered, indicating that residents had received their radons
in mass-produced, one-line vessels. After examining these and other
artifacts, Weiss constructed a time line of the city's history, from
its origins as a small farming village (around 5000 B.C.), to its
growth into an independent city of some thirty thousand people (2600
B.C.), and on to its reorganization under imperial rule (2300 B.C.).
Wherever Weiss and his team dug, they also
encountered a layer of dirt that contained no signs of human
habitation. This layer, which was more than three feet deep,
corresponded to the years 2200 to 1900 B.C., and it indicated that,
around the time of Akkad's fall, Tell Leilan had been completely
abandoned. In 1991, Weiss sent soil samples from Tell Leilan to a
lab for analysis. The results showed that, around the year 2200
B.C., even the city's earthworms had died out. Eventually, Weiss
came to believe that the lifeless soil of Tell Leilan and the end of
the Akkadian empire were products of the same phenomenon---a drought
so prolonged and so severe that, in his words, it represented an
example of "climate change.”
Weiss first published his theory, in the
journal Science, in August, 1993. Since then, the list of cultures
whose demise has been linked to climate
change has continued to grow. They include the Classic Mayan
civilization, which collapsed at the height of its development,
around 800 A.D.; the Tiwanaku civilization, which thrived near Lake
Titicaca, in the Andes, for more than a millennium, then
disintegrated around 1100 A.D.; and the Old Kingdom of Egypt, which
collapsed around the same time as the Akkadian empire. (In an
account eerily reminiscent of "The Curse of Akkad," the Egyptian
sage Ipuwer described the anguish of the period: "Lo, the desert
claims the land. Towns are ravaged…Food is lacking…Ladies suffer
like maidservants. Lo, those who were entombed are cast on high
grounds.") In each of these cases, what began as a provocative
hypothesis has, as new information has emerged, come to seem more
and more compelling. For example, the notion that Mayan civilization
had been undermined by climate change was
first proposed in the late nineteen-eighties, at which point there
was little climatological evidence to support it. Then, in the
mid-nineteen-nineties, American scientists studying sediment cores
from Lake Chichancanab, in north-central Yucatan, reported that
precipitation patterns in the region had indeed shifted during the
ninth and tenth centuries, and that this shift had led to periods of
prolonged drought. More recently, a group of researchers examining
ocean-sediment cores collected off the coast of Venezuela produced
an even more detailed record of rainfall in the area. They found
that the region experienced a series of severe, "multi-year drought
events" beginning around 750 A.D. The collapse of the Classic Mayan
civilization, which has been described as "a demographic disaster as
profound as any other in human history,” is thought to have cost
millions of lives.
The climate
shifts that affected past cultures predate industrialization by
hundreds---or, in the case of the Akkadians, thousands--of years.
They reflect the climate system's innate
variability and were caused by forces that, at this point, can only
be guessed at. By contrast, the climate
shifts predicted for the coming century are attributable to forces
that are now well known. Exactly how big these shifts will be is a
matter of both intense scientific interest and the greatest possible
historical significance. In this context, the discovery that large
and sophisticated cultures have already been undone by
climate change presents what can only be called an
uncomfortable precedent.
The Goddard Institute for Space Studies,
or GISS, is situated just south of Columbia University's main
campus, at the corner of Broadway and West 112th Street. The
institute is not well marked, but most New Yorkers would probably
recognize the building: its ground floor is home to Tom's
Restaurant, the coffee shop made famous by "Seinfeld.”
GISS, an outpost of NASA, started out,
forty-four years ago, as a planetary-research center; today, its
major function is making forecasts about climate
change. GISS employs about a hundred and fifty people, many of whom
spend their days working on calculations that may—or may not--end up
being incorporated in the institute's climate
model. Some work on algorithms that describe the behavior of the
atmosphere, some on the behavior of the oceans, some on vegetation,
some on clouds, and some on making sure that all these algorithms,
when they are combined, produce results that seem consistent with
the real world. (Once, when some refinements were made to the model,
rain nearly stopped falling over the rain forest.) The latest
version of the GISS model, called ModelE, consists of a hundred and
twenty-five thousand lines of computer code.
GISS's director, James Hansen, occupies a
spacious, almost comically cluttered office on the institute's
seventh floor. (I must have expressed some uneasiness the first time
I visited him, because the following day I received an e-mail
assuring me that the office was "a lot better organized than it used
to be.") Hansen, who is sixty-three, is a spare man
with a lean face and a fringe of brown hair. Although he has
probably done as much to publicize the dangers of global warming as
any other scientist, in person he is reticent almost to the point of
shyness. When I asked him how he had come to play such a prominent
role, he just shrugged. "Circumstances," he said.
Hansen first became interested in
climate change in the mid-nineteen- seventies.
Under the direction of James Van Allen (for whom the Van Allen
radiation belts are named), he had written his doctoral dissertation
on the climate of Venus. In it, he had
proposed that the planet, which has an average surface temperature
of eight hundred and sixty-seven degrees Fahrenheit, was kept warm
by a smoggy haze; soon afterward, a space probe showed that Venus
was actually insulated by an atmosphere that consists of ninety-six
per cent carbon dioxide. When solid data began to show what was
happening to greenhouse-gas levels on earth, Hansen became, in his
words, "captivated." He decided that a planet whose atmosphere could
change in the course of a human lifetime was more interesting than
one that was going to continue, for all intents and purposes, to
broil away forever. A group of scientists at NASA had put together a
computer program to try to improve weather forecasting using
satellite data. Hansen and a team of half a dozen other researchers
set out to modify it, in order to make longer-range forecasts about
what would happen to global temperatures as greenhouse gases
continued to accumulate. The project, which resulted in the first
version of the GISS climate model, took
nearly seven years to complete.
At that time, there was little empirical
evidence to support the notion that the earth was warming.
Instrumental temperature records go back, in a consistent fashion,
only to the mid-nineteenth century. They show that average global
temperatures rose through the first half of the twentieth century,
then dipped in the nineteen-fifties and sixties. Nevertheless, by
the early nineteen-eighties Hansen had gained enough confidence in
his model to begin to make a series of increasingly audacious
predictions. In 1981, he forecast that "carbon dioxide warming
should emerge from the noise of natural climate
variability" around the year 2000. During the exceptionally hot
summer of 1988, he appeared before a Senate subcommittee and
announced that he was "ninety-nine per cent" sure that "global
warming is affecting our planet now.” And in the summer of 1990 he
offered to bet a roomful of fellow-scientists a hundred dollars that
either that year or one of the following two years would be the
warmest on record. To qualify, the year would have to set a record
not only for land temperatures but also for sea-surface temperatures
and for temperatures in the lower atmosphere. Hansen won the bet in
six months.
Like all climate
models, GISS's divides the world into a series of boxes.
Thirty-three hundred and twelve boxes cover the earth's surface, and
this pattern is repeated twenty times moving up through the
atmosphere, so that the whole arrangement might be thought of as a
set of enormous checkerboards stacked on top of one another. Each
box represents an area of four degrees latitude by five degrees
longitude. (The height of the box varies depending on altitude.) In
the real world, of course, such a large area would have an
incalculable number of features; in the world of the model, features
such as lakes and forests and, indeed, whole mountain ranges are
reduced to a limited set of properties, which are then expressed as
numerical approximations. Time in this grid world moves ahead for
the most part in discrete, half-hour intervals, meaning that a new
set of calculations is performed for each box for every thirty
minutes that is supposed to have elapsed in actuality. Depending on
what part of the globe a box represents, these calculations may
involve dozens of different algorithms, so that a model run that is
supposed to simulate climate conditions
over the next hundred years involves more than a quadrillion
separate operations. A single run of the G1SS model, done on a
supercomputer, usually takes about a month.
Very broadly speaking, there are two types
of equations that go into a climate model.
The first group expresses fundamental physical principles, like the
conservation of energy and the law of gravity. The second group
describes—the term of art is "parameterize"—patterns and
interactions that have been observed in nature but may be only
partly understood, or processes that occur on a small scale, and
have to be averaged out over huge spaces. Here, for example, is a
tiny piece of ModelE, written in the computer language FORTRAN,
which deals with the formation of clouds:
C**** COMPUTE THE AUTOCONVERSION
RATE OF CLOUD WATER TO PRECIPITATION
RHO= 1 .E5 * PL(L)/(RGAS *TL(L))
TEM--RHO*WMX(L)/(WCONST*FCLD+
1.E-20)
IF(LHX.EQ.LHS) TEM=RHO*WMX(L)/
(WMUI*FCLD+1.E-20)
TEM =TEM*TEM
IF(TEM.GT.10.) TEM=10.
CM1=CM0
IF(BANDF) CM1=CM0 *CBF
IF(LHX.EQ.LHS) CM1=CM0
CM=CM1 *(1.-1./EXP(TEM*TEM))+1.
*100.*(PREBAR(L+1)+
*PRECNVL(L+ 1)* BYDTSTC)
IF(CM.GT.BYDTSrC) CM=BYDTSrC
PREP(L)=WMX(L) *CM
END IF
C* * * * FORM CLOUDS ONLY IF RH GT RH00
219 IF(RH1(L).LT.RH00(L)) GO TO 220.
All climate
models treat the laws of physics in the same way, but, since they
parameterize phenomena like cloud formation differently, they come
up with different results. (At this point, there are some fifteen
major climate models in operation around
the globe.) Also, because the real-world forces influencing the
climate are so numerous, different models
tend, like medical students, to specialize in different processes.
GISS's model, for example, specializes in the behavior of the
atmosphere, other models in the behavior of the oceans, and still
others in the behavior of land surfaces and ice sheets.
Last fall, I attended a meeting at GISS
which brought together members of the institute's modelling team.
When I arrived; about twenty men and five women were sitting in
battered chairs in a conference room across from Hansen's office. At
that particular moment, the institute was performing a series of
runs for the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change. The runs were overdue, and apparently the I.P.C.C. was
getting impatient. Hansen flashed a series of charts on a screen on
the wall summarizing some of the results obtained so far.
The obvious difficulty in verifying any
particular climate model or
climate-model run is the prospective nature of the
results. For this reason, models are often run into the past, to see
how well they reproduce trends that have already been observed.
Hansen told the group that he was pleased with how ModelE had
reproduced the aftermath of the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo, in the
Philippines, which took place in June of 1991. Volcanic eruptions
release huge quantifies of sulfur dioxide--Pinatubo produced some
twenty million tons of the gas---which, once in the stratosphere,
condenses into tiny sulfate droplets. These droplets, or aerosols,
tend to cool the earth by reflecting sunlight back into space. (Man-made
aerosols, produced by burning coal, oil, and biomass, also reflect
sunlight and are a countervailing force to greenhouse warming,
albeit one with serious health consequences of its own.) This
cooling effect lasts as long as the aerosols remain suspended in the
atmosphere. In 1992, global temperatures, which had been rising
sharply, fell by half of a degree. Then they began to climb again.
ModelE had succeeded in simulating this effect to within
nine-hundredths of a degree. "That's a pretty nice test," Hansen
observed laconically.
One day, when I was talking to Hansen in
his office, he pulled a pair of photographs out of his briefcase.
The first showed a chubby-faced five-year-old girl holding some
miniature Christmas-tree lights in front of an even chubbier—faced
five-month-old baby. The girl, Hansen told me, was his granddaughter
Sophie and the boy was his new grandson, Connor. The caption on the
first picture read, "Sophie explains green-house warming." The
caption on the second photograph, which showed the baby smiling
gleefully, read, "Connor gets it.”
When modellers talk about what drives the
climate, they focus on what they call
"forcings." A forcing is any ongoing process or discrete event that
alters the energy of the system. Examples of natural forcings
include, in addition to volcanic eruptions, periodic shifts in the
earth's orbit and changes in the sun's output, like those linked to
sun-spots. Many climate shifts of the past
have no known forcing associated with them; for instance, no one is
certain what brought about the so-called Little Ice Age, which began
in Europe some five hundred years ago. A very large forcing,
meanwhile, should produce a commensurately large--and
obvious--effect. One GISS scientist put it to me this way: "If the
sun went supernova, there's no question that we could model what
would happen.”
Adding carbon dioxide, or any other
greenhouse gas, to the atmosphere by, say, burning fossil fuels or
levelling forests is, in the language of climate
science, an anthropogenic forcing. Since pre-industrial times, the
concentration of CO2 in the earth's atmosphere has risen by roughly
a third, from 280 parts per million to 378 p.p.m. During the same
period, concentrations of methane, an even more powerful (but more
short—lived) greenhouse gas, have more than doubled, from .78 p.p.m,
to 1.76 p.p.m. Scientists measure forcings in terms of watts per
square metre, or w/m2, by which the), mean that a certain number of
watts of energy have been added (or, in the case of a negative
forcing, subtracted) for every single square metre of the earth's
surface. The size of the green-house forcing is estimated, at this
point, to be 2.5 w/m2. A miniature Christmas light gives off about
four tenths of a watt of energy, mostly in the form of heat, so
that, in effect (as Sophie supposedly explained to Connor), we have
covered the earth with tiny bulbs, six for every square metre. These
bulbs are burning twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, year
in and year out.
If greenhouse gases were held constant at
today's levels, it is estimated that it would take several decades
for the full impact of the forcing that is already in place to be
felt. This is because raising the earth's temperature involves not
only warming the air and the surface of the land but also melting
sea ice, liquefying glaciers, mad, most significant, heating the
oceans--all processes that require tremendous amounts of energy
(Imagine trying to thaw a gallon of ice cream or warm a pot of water
using an Easy-Bake oven.) It could be argued that the delay that is
built into the system is socially useful, because it enables
us--with the help of climate models--to
prepare for what lies ahead, or that it is socially disastrous,
because it allows us to keep adding CO2 to the atmosphere while
fobbing the impacts off on our children and grandchildren. Either
way, if current trends continue, which is to say, if steps are not
taken to reduce emissions, carbon dioxide levels will probably reach
500 parts per million-nearly double pre-industrial levels--sometime
around the middle of the century. By that point, of course, the
forcing associated with greenhouse gases will also have increased,
to four watts per square metre and possibly more. For comparison's
sake, it is worth keeping in mind that the total forcing that ended
the last ice agenda forcing that was eventually sufficient to melt
mile-thick ice sheets and raise global sea levels by four hundred
feet--is estimated to have been just six and a half watts per square
metre.
There are two ways to operate a
climate model. In the first, which is known as a
transient run, greenhouse gases are slowly added to the simulated
atmosphere--just as they would be to the real atmosphere--and the
model forecasts what the effect of these additions will be at any
given moment. In the second, greenhouse gases are added to the
atmosphere all at once, and the model is run at these new levels
until the climate has fully adjusted to
the forcing by reaching a new equilibrium. Not surprisingly, this is
known as an equilibrium run. For doubled CO2, equilibrium runs of
the GISS model predict that average global temperatures will rise by
4.9 degrees Fahrenheit. Only about a third of this increase is
directly attributable to more greenhouse gases; the rest is a result
of indirect effects, the most important among them being the
so-called "water-vapor feedback." (Since warmer air holds more
moisture, higher temperatures are expected to produce an atmosphere
containing more water vapor, which is itself a greenhouse gas.)
GISS's forecast is on the low end of the most recent projections;
the Hadley Centre model, which is run by the British Met Office,
predicts that for doubled CO2 the eventual temperature rise will be
6.3 degrees Fahrenheit, while Japan's National Institute for
Environmental Studies predicts 7.7 degrees.
In the context of ordinary life, a warming
of 4.9, or even of 7.7, degrees may not seem like much to worry
about; in the course of a normal summer's day, after all, air
temperatures routinely rise by twenty degrees or more. Average
global temperatures, however, have practically nothing to do with
ordinary life. In the middle of the last glaciation, Manhattan,
Boston, and Chicago were deep under ice, and sea levels were so low
that Siberia and Alaska were connected by a land bridge nearly a
thousand miles wide. At that point, average global temperatures were
roughly ten degrees colder than they are today. Conversely, since
our species evolved, average temperatures have never been much more
than two or three degrees higher than they are right now.
This last point is one that climatologists
find particularly significant. By studying Antarctic ice cores,
researchers have been able to piece together a record both of the
earth's temperature and of the composition of its atmosphere going
back four full glacial cycles. (Temperature data can be extracted
from the isotopic composition of the ice, and the makeup of the
atmosphere can be reconstructed by analyzing tiny bubbles of trapped
air.) What this record shows is that the planet is now nearly as
warm as it has been at any point in the last four hundred and twenty
thousand years. A possible consequence of even a four-or five-degree
temperature rise--on the low end of projections for doubled CO2--is
that the world will enter a completely new climate
regime, one with which modern humans have no prior experience.
Meanwhile, at 378 p.p.m., CO2 levels are significantly higher today
than they have been at any other point in the Antarctic record. It
is believed that the last time carbon-dioxide levels were in this
range was three and a half million years ago, during what is known
as the mid-Pliocene warm period, and they likely have not been much
above it for tens of millions of years. A scientist with the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad- ministration (NOAA) put it to
meanly half-jokingly--this way: "It's true that we've had higher CO2
levels before. But, then, of course, we also had dinosaurs.”
David Rind is a climate
scientist who has worked at GISS since 1978. Rind acts as a
trouble-shooter for the institute's model, scanning reams of numbers
known as diagnostics, trying to catch problems, and he also works
with GISS'S Climate Impacts Group. (His
office, like Hansen's, is filled with dusty piles of computer
printouts.) Although higher temperatures are the most obvious and
predictable result of increased CO2, other, second-order
consequences--rising sea levels, changes in vegetation, loss of snow
cover--are likely to be just as significant. Rind's particular
interest is how CO2 levels will affect water supplies, because, as
he put it to me, "you can't have a plastic version of water.”
One afternoon, when I was talking to Rind
in his office, he mentioned a visit that President Bush's science
adviser, John Marburger, had paid to GISS a few years earlier. "He
said, 'We're really interested in adaptation to climate
change,' " Rind recalled. "Well, what does 'adaptation' mean?" He
rummaged through one of his many file cabinets and finally pulled
out a paper that he had published in the Journal of Geophysical
Research entitled "Potential Evapo—transpiration and the Likelihood
of Future Drought." In much the same way that wind velocity is
measured using the Beaufort scale, water availability is measured
using what's known as the Palmer Drought Severity Index. Different
climate models offer very different
predictions about future water availability; in the paper, Rind
applied the criteria used in the Palmer index to GISS's model and
also to a model operated by NOAA's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics
Laboratory. He found that as carbon-dioxide levels rose the world
began to experience more and more serious water shortages, starting
near the equator and then spreading toward the poles. When he
applied the index to the GISS model for doubled CO2, it showed most
of the continental United States to be suffering under severe
drought conditions. When he applied the index to the G.F.D.L. model,
the results were even more dire. Rind created two maps to illustrate
these findings. Yellow represented a forty—to—sixty-per-cent chance
of summertime drought, ochre a sixty-to-eighty-per-cent chance, and
brown an eighty-to-a-hundred-per- cent chance. In the first map,
showing the GISS results, the Northeast was yellow, the Midwest was
ochre, and the Rocky Mountain states and California were brown. In
the second, showing the G.F.D.L. results, brown covered practically
the entire country.
"I gave a talk based on these drought
indices out in California to water-resource managers," Rind told me.
"And they said, 'Well, if that happens, forget it.' There's just no
way they could deal with that.”
He went on, "Obviously, if you get drought
indices like these, there's no adaptation that's possible. But let's
say it's not that severe. What adaptation are we talking about?
Adaptation in 2020? Adaptation in 2040? Adaptation in 2060? Because
the way the models project this, as global warming gets going, once
you've adapted to one decade you're going to have to change
everything the next decade.
"We may say that we're more
technologically able than earlier societies. But one thing about
climate change is it's potentially
geopolitically destabilizing. And we're not only more
technologically able; we're more technologically able destructively
as well. I think it's impossible to predict what will happen. I
guess--though I won't be around to see it--I wouldn't he shocked to
find out that by 2100 most things were destroyed." He paused.
"That's sort of an extreme view.”
On the other side of the Hudson River and
slightly to the north of GISS, the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
occupies what was once a week-end estate in the town of Palisades,
New York. The observatory is an outpost of Columbia University, and
it houses, among its collections of natural artifacts, the world's
largest assembly of ocean-sediment cores--more than thirteen
thousand in all The cores are kept in steel compartments that look
like drawers from a firing cabinet, only longer and much skinnier.
Some of the cores are chalky, some are clayey, and some are made up
almost entirely of gravel. All can be coaxed to yield up--in one way
or an-other--information about past climates.
Peter deMenocal is a paleoclimatologist
who has worked at Lamont-Doherty for fifteen years. He is an expert
on ocean cores, and also on the climate of
the Pliocene, which lasted from roughly five million to two million
years ago. Around two and a half million years ago, the earth, which
had been warm and relatively ice-free, started to cool down until it
entered an era--the Pleistocene of recurring glaciations. DeMenocal
has argued that this transition was a key event in human evolution:
right around the time that it occurred, at least two types of
hominids--one of which would eventually give rise to us--branched
off from a single ancestral line. Until quite recently,
paleoclimatologists like deMenocal rarely bothered with anything
much closer to the present day; the current interglacial--the
Holocene--which began some ten thousand years ago, was believed to
be, climatically speaking, too stable to warrant much study. In the
mid-nineties, though, de-Menocal, motivated by a growing concern
over global warming--and a concomitant shift in government research
funds--decided to look in detail at some Holocene cores. What he
learned, as he put it to me when I visited him at Lamont-Doherty
last fall, was "less boring than we had thought.”
One way to extract climate
data from ocean sediments is to examine the remains of what lived
or, perhaps more pertinently, what died and was buried there. The
oceans are rich with microscopic creatures known as foraminifera.
There are about thirty planktonic species in all, and each thrives
at a different temperature, so that by counting a species'
prevalence in a given sample it is possible to estimate the ocean
temperatures at the time the sediment was formed. When de-Menocal
used this technique to analyze cores that had been collected off the
coast of Mauritania, he found that they contained evidence of
recurring cool periods; every fifteen hundred years or so, water
temperatures dropped for a few centuries before climbing back up
again. (The most recent cool period corresponds to the Little Ice
Age, which ended about a century and a half ago.) Also, perhaps even
more significant, the cores showed profound changes in
precipitation. Until about six thousand years ago, northern Africa
was relatively wet--dotted with small lakes. Then it became dry, as
it is today. DeMenocal traced the shift to periodic variations in
the earth's orbit, which, in a generic sense, are the same forces
that trigger ice ages. But orbital changes occur gradually, over
thousands of years, and northern Africa appears to have switched
from wet to dry all of a sudden. Although no one knows exactly how
this happened, it seems, like so many climate
events, to have been a function of feedbacks---the less rain the
continent got, the less vegetation there was to retain water, and so
on until, finally, the system just flipped. The process provides yet
more evidence of how a very small forcing sustained over time can
produce dramatic results.
"We were kind of surprised by what we
found," deMenocal told me about his work on the supposedly stable
Holocene. "Actually, more than surprised. It was one of these things
where, you know, in life you take certain things for granted, like
your neighbor's not going to be an axe murderer. And then you
discover your neighbor is an axe murderer.”
Not long after deMenocal began to think
about the Holocene, a brief mention of his work on the
climate of Africa appeared in a book produced by
National Geographic. On the facing page, there was a piece on Harvey
Weiss and his work at Tell Leilan. DeMenocal vividly remembers his
reaction. "I thought, Holy cow, that's just amazing!" he told me.
"It was one of these cases where I lost sleep that night, I just
thought it was such a cool idea.”
DeMenocal also recalls his subsequent
dismay when he went to learn more. "It struck me that they were
calling on this climate-change argument,
and I wondered how come I didn't know about it," he said. He looked
at the Science paper in which Weiss had originally laid out his
theory. "First of all, I scanned the list of authors and there was
no paleoclimatologist on there," deMenocal said. "So then I started
reading through the paper and there basically was no
paleoclimatology in it." (The main piece of evidence Weiss adduced
for a drought was that Tell Leilan had filled with dust.) The more
deMenocal thought about it, the more unconvincing he found the data,
on the one hand, and the more compelling he found the underlying
idea, on the other. "I just couldn't leave it alone," he told me. In
the summer of 1995, he went with Weiss to Syria to visit Tell
Lellan. Subsequently, he decided to do his own study to prove--or
disprove--Weiss's theory.
Instead of looking in, or even near, the
ruined city, deMenocal focussed on the Gulf of Oman, nearly a
thousand miles downwind. Dust from the Mesopotamian floodplains,
just north of Tell Leilan, contains heavy concentrations of the
mineral dolomite, and since arid soil produces more wind-borne dust,
deMenocal figured that if there had been a drought of any magnitude
it would show up in gulf sediments. "In a wet period, you'd be
getting none or very, very, low amounts of dolomite, and during a
dry period you'd be getting a lot," he explained. He and a graduate
student named Heidi Cullen developed a highly sensitive test to
detect dolomite, and then Cullen assayed, centimetre by centimetre,
a sediment core that had been extracted near where the Gulf of Oman
meets the Arabian Sea.
"She started going up through the core,"
DeMenocal told me. "It was like nothing, nothing, nothing, nothing,
nothing. Then one day, I think it was a Friday afternoon, she goes,
'Oh, my God.' It was really classic." DeMenocal had thought that the
dolomite level, if it were elevated at all, would be modestly
higher; instead, it went up by tour hundred per cent. Still, he
wasn't satisfied. He decided to have the core re-analyzed using a
different marker: the ratio of strontium 86 and strontium 87
isotopes. The same spike showed up. When deMenocal had the core
carbon-dated, it turned out that the spike lined up exactly with me
period of Tell Leilan's abandonment.
Tell Leilan was never an easy place to
live. Much like, say, western Kansas today, the Khabur plains
received enough annual rainfall--about seventeen inches--to support
cereal crops, but not enough to grow much else. "Year-to-year
variations were a real threat, and so they obviously needed to have
grain storage and to have ways to buffer themselves," deMenocal
observed. "One generation would tell the next, 'Look, there are
these things that happen that you've got to be prepared for.' And
they were good at that. They could manage that. They were there for
hundreds of years.”
He went on, "The thing they couldn't
prepare for was the same thing that we won't prepare for, because in
their case they didn't know about it and because in our case the
political system can't listen to it. And that is that the
climate system has much greater firings in store
for us than we think.”
Shortly before Christmas, Harvey Weiss
gave a lunchtime lecture at Yale's Institute for Biospheric Studies.
The title was "What Happened in the Holocene," which, as Weiss
explained, was an allusion to a famous archeology text by V. Gordon
Childe, entitled "What Happened in History." The talk brought
together archeological and paleoclimatic records from the Near East
over the last ten thousand years.
Weiss, who is sixty years old, has
thinning gray hair, wire-rimmed glasses, and an excitable manner. He
had prepared for the audience--mostly Yale professors and graduate
students--a handout with a time line of Mesopotamian history. Key
cultural events appeared in black ink, key climatological ones in
red. The two alternated in a rhythmic cycle of disaster and
innovation. Around 6200 B.C., a severe global cold snap--red
ink--produced aridity in the Near East. (The cause of the cold snap
is believed to have been a catastrophic flood that emptied an
enormous glacial lake---called Lake Agassiz--into the North
Atlantic.) Right around the same time--black ink--farming villages
in northern Mesopotamia were abandoned, while in central and
southern Mesopotamia the art of irrigation was invented. Three
thousand years later, there was another cold snap, after which
settlements in northern Mesopotamia once again were deserted. The
most recent red event, in 2200 B.C., was followed by the dissolution
of the Old Kingdom in Egypt, the abandonment of villages in ancient
Palestine, and the fall of Akkad. Toward the end of his talk, Weiss,
using a PowerPoint program, displayed some photographs from the
excavation at Tell Leilan. One showed the wall of a
buildings-probably in- tended for administrative offices-that had
been under construction when the rain stopped. The wall was made
from blocks of basalt topped by rows of mud bricks. The bricks gave
out abruptly; as if construction had ceased from one day to the
next.
The monochromatic sort of history that
most of us grew up with did not allow for events like the drought
that destroyed Tell Leilan. Civilizations fell, we were taught,
because of wars or barbarian invasions or political unrest. (Another
famous text by Childe bears the exemplary tide "Man
Makes Himself.") Adding red to the time line points up the deep
contingency of the whole enterprise. Civilization goes back, at the
most, ten thousand years, even though, evolutionarily speaking,
modern man has been around for at least
ten times that long. The climate of the
Holocene was not boring, but at least it was dull enough to allow
people to sit still. It is only after the immense climatic shifts of
the glacial epoch had run their course that writing and agriculture
finally emerged.
Nowhere else does the archeological record
go back so far or in such detail as in the Near East. But similar
red-and- black chronologies can now be drawn up for many other parts
of the world: the Indus Valley, where, some four thousand years ago,
the Harappan civilization suffered a decline after a change in
monsoon patterns; the Andes, where, fourteen hundred years ago, the
Moche abandoned their dries in a period of diminished rainfall; and
even the United States, where the arrival of the English colonists
on Roanoke Island, in 1587, coincided with a severe regional
drought. (By the time English ships returned to resupply the
colonists, three years later, no one was left.) At the height of the
Mayan civilization, population density was five hundred per square
mile, higher than it is in most parts of the U. S. today. Two
hundred years later, much of the territory occupied by the Mayans
had been completely depopulated. You can argue that man
through culture creates stability, or you can argue, just as
plausibly, that stability is for culture an essential precondition.
After the lecture, I walked with Weiss
back to his office, which is near the center of the Yale campus, in
the Hall of Graduate Studies. This past year, Weiss decided to
suspend excavation at Tell Leilan. The site lies only fifty miles
from the Iraqi border, and, owing to the uncertainties of the war,
it seemed like the wrong sort of place to bring graduate students.
When I visited, Weiss had just returned from a trip to Damascus,
where he had gone to pay the guards who watch over the site when he
isn't there. While he was away from his office, its contents bad
been piled up in a corner by repairmen who had come to fix some
pipes. Weiss considered the piles disconsolately; then unlocked a
door at the back of the room.
The door led to a second room, much larger
than the first. It was set up like a library, except that instead of
books the shelves were stacked with hundreds of cardboard boxes.
Each box contained fragments of broken pottery from Tell Leilan.
Some were painted, others were incised with intricate designs, and
still others were barely distinguishable from pebbles. Every
fragment had been inscribed with a number, indicating its
provenance.
I asked what he thought life in Tell
Leilan had been like. Weiss told me that that was a "corny
question," so I asked him about the city's abandonment. "Nothing
allows you to go beyond the third or fourth year of a drought, and
by the fifth or sixth year you're probably gone," he observed.
"You've given up hope for the rain, which is exactly what they wrote
in 'The Curse of Akkad.'" I asked to see something that might have
been used in Tell Leilan's last days. Swearing softly; Weiss
searched through the rows until he finally found one particular box.
It held several potsherds that appeared to have come from identical
bowls. They were made from a greenish-colored clay, had been thrown
on a wheel, and had no decoration. Intact, the bowls had held about
a litre, and Weiss explained that they had been used to mete out
rations----probably wheat or barley--to the workers of Tell Leilan.
He passed me one of the fragments. I held it in my hand for a moment
and tried to imagine the last Akkadian who had touched it. Then I
passed it back (This is the second part of a three-part article.)
PHOTO (COLOR): When the Akkadian empire
collapsed, around 2200 B. C., even the earthworms died. Photograph
by Joseph Coscia, Jr.
~~~~~~~~
By Elizabeth Kolbert
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