Ziggurat at Ur (modern Tall al-Muqayyar, Iraq). © Simon11uk—iStock/Getty Images
Ishtartv.com – Reuters
October 30, 2025
UR, Iraq: Iraqi officials are sounding the alarm to save monuments of
the cradle of civilization, with thousands of years of history at risk of
disappearing as Iraq’s ancient southern cities face erosion because of climate
change.
Harsh, dry weather is increasing salinity in the soil and damaging the
historical monuments in the ruins of cities such as Ur, the birthplace of the
Biblical patriarch Abraham, and Babylon, once-magnificent capital of empires.
Sand dunes are causing the deterioration of the northern side of the majestic
Ziggurat of Ur, a massive stepped pyramid temple that was dedicated more than
4,000 years ago to the moon god, Nanna.
“The combination of wind and sand dunes leads to the erosion of the northern
sections of the structure,” said Abdullah Nasrallah, an archaeologist at the
antiquities department in Dhi Qar province — where the city of Ur is located.
SALT EATS AWAY AT ANCIENT MUD BRICKS
The shrine, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, remains one of the best-preserved
examples of ancient Mesopotamian architecture that offers an insight into
religious practices and sacred rituals of the Sumerian empire, where one of the
world’s first civilizations flourished.
“While the third layer (of the Ziggurat) had already deteriorated due to
weathering and climate change, erosion has now begun to affect the second
layer,” Nasrallah said.
Nearby, salt deposits have been eating away the mud bricks of the Royal
Cemetery of Ur, discovered by British archaeologist Sir Leonard Woolley in the
1920s and now at risk of collapsing.
“These salt deposits appeared due to global warming and climate change — which
led to the destruction of important parts of the cemetery,” said Dr. Kazem
Hassoun, an inspector at the antiquities department in Dhi Qar.
“Eventually, the deposits will cause the complete collapse of the mud bricks
that make up this cemetery,” Hassoun said.
Iraq is battling rising temperatures and heavy droughts that have increased the
salinity levels in its south, where the mighty Tigris and Euphrates rivers
converge as they approach the Gulf.
Further up the Euphrates, the archaeological sites of ancient Babylon are in
danger as well. They urgently require attention and restoration, but the lack
of funding remains a challenge, Dr. Montaser Al-Hasnawi, the director general
of Iraq’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism, told Reuters.
The country has already endured decades of warfare that threatened its
historical structures — from war with Iran in the 1980s, to the Gulf War of the
early 1990s, the 2003 US-led invasion followed by insurgent violence and the
rise and fall of the Daesh group.
Its latest challenge is climate change altering the country’s whole ecosystem,
not only putting its agricultural future at risk, but also endangering its
historical footprint.
In Babylon, high salinity levels are endangering the clay-based materials of
ancient structures, on which elaborate Sumerian drawings are still visible.
The materials were sourced directly from the land which had lower salinity at
the time. That could have made them less vulnerable to climate change, but
improper restoration practices in previous decades made the old structures more
susceptible, Hasnawi said. Rising salinity makes the need to redo the flawed
restoration more pressing.
“The salinity problem is increasing in both surface and groundwater. This will
lead to the destruction of many cities that are beneath the earth,” Hasnawi
said.
Aerial view of one of Nebuchadnezzar II's palaces in ancient Babylon. (Source: Jukka Palm/Shutterstock)
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