Guidebook publishes list of world's 500 endangered sites
London, Oct 27 ANI: A new guidebook has published a
list of 500 endangered sites across the world that are most at risk from developers and
climate change. According to a
report in
Telegraph, the guidebook is titled "Frommer's 500
Places To See Before They Disappear".The
book will look at
places to visit that feature endangered landscapes, ecosystems,
buildings, cultural spots and
animal species. "The devastation wrought by
climate change and direct
man-made interference is familiar to
all of us," said o-author Holly
Hughes, a former executive
editor of Fodor's
Travel Publications."But, this
book is a carefully chosen
list of last-chance destinations that eco-conscious travelers can enjoy - if they move sharpish - for possibly the last time," she added. UK sites include the
Tower of
London and Greenwich Maritime
Museum, which are both at risk from rising
ocean levels, which could lead the Thames to flood its
banks. The Holderness coast, in East Yorkshire, is also on the
list, losing nearly 6ft a year due to rising sea levels caused by
climate change and
man-made interference. Another
London landmark, Battersea power station, becomes more derelict every day as
government, developers and local
community boards wrangle over its future. Global sites, which make the
list, include the pyramids of Giza. Unrestricted development and urban sprawl from nearby
Cairo threaten the ancient pyramids and the Great Sphinx. The Everglades in southern
Florida also make the
list. Filled with rare species, this ecosystem is degenerating with alarming rapidity. Already half has been lost to agricultural and urban development. Dwindling
water levels and
pollution have severely compromised what remains. The
Dead Sea may only survive for three decades more, according to
Hughes. She said that by then "it could be completely dry, thanks to the diverting of the rivers that feed it".
Marine life around the
Falkland Islands is also under severe threat from dumping by sanitation companies and ships. The Nazca lines in
Peru, one of the world's most intriguing ancient sites,
face destruction as
roads are built and
global warming and deforestation cause
floods and mudslides. Also under threat is New York's
Little Italy. "Though a vestige of the area, celebrated in
films from The Godfather to Mean Streets, has been preserved, it is being gradually squeezed by the burgeoning Chinatown and SoHo districts," said
Hughes. ANI
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