Thursday, February 20, 2025

 

Coastal erosion threatens this ancient city — and others much closer to home


USC research on the vanishing coastlines of Alexandria, Egypt, offers nature-based solutions for protecting coastal cities globally, including those in California.



University of Southern California

Building collapsing in Alexandria, Egypt 

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In the historic coastal districts of Alexandria, buildings are sinking as rising groundwater seeps up from below. (Photo/Courtesy of Essam Heggy and Sara Fouad)

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Credit: (Photo/Courtesy of Essam Heggy and Sara Fouad)




A new USC study reveals a dramatic surge in building collapses in the ancient Egyptian port city of Alexandria, directly linked to rising sea levels and seawater intrusion.

Once a rare occurrence, building collapses in Alexandria — one of the world’s oldest cities, often called the “bride of the Mediterranean” for its beauty — have accelerated from approximately one per year to an alarming 40 per year over the past decade, the researchers found.

“The true cost of this loss extends far beyond bricks and mortar. We are witnessing the gradual disappearance of historic coastal cities, with Alexandria sounding the alarm. What once seemed like distant climate risks are now a present reality,” said Essam Heggy, a water scientist at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering and the study’s corresponding author.

“For centuries, Alexandria’s structures stood as marvels of resilient engineering, enduring earthquakes, storm surges, tsunamis and more. But now, rising seas and intensifying storms — fueled by climate change — are undoing in decades what took millennia of human ingenuity to create,” said Sara Fouad, a landscape architect at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and the study’s first author.

Coastal erosion: Sinking cities and rising seas

Even small sea level increases — just a few centimeters — can have devastating effects, Heggy said, threatening even cities as historically resilient as Alexandria, which has withstood centuries of earthquakes, invasions and fires, and even a modern metropolis like Los Angeles, where flash floods and mudslides are now complicating recovery from the recent wildfires.

Published in Earth’s Future, an AGU journal, the study coincides with troubling findings from NASA and NOAA showing that parts of California — including the San Francisco Bay Area, Central Valley and coastal Southern California — are sinking. These minor elevation changes can significantly heighten flood risks and saltwater intrusion, scientists warn.

Like Alexandria, California’s coastal cities face growing threats from saltwater intrusion, which weakens infrastructure, degrades water supplies and drives up the cost of living.

“Our study challenges the common misconception that we’ll only need to worry when sea levels rise by a meter,” Heggy said. “However, what we’re showing here is that coastlines globally, especially Mediterranean coastlines similar to California’s, are already changing and causing building collapses at an unprecedented rate.”

Tracking coastal erosion in Alexandria, Egypt

The researchers used a three-pronged approach to assess the impact of shoreline changes on Alexandria’s buildings.

First, they created a detailed digital map using geographic information system technology to identify the locations of collapsed buildings across six districts of the city’s historic urban area, one of its most densely populated regions. The map catalogs key details about each structure, including its location, size, construction materials, age, foundation depth and number of floors.

The data, collected from site visits, government reports, news archives and statements from private construction companies, spans 2001 to 2021 and includes both fully and partially collapsed buildings.

Next, they combined satellite imagery with historical maps from 1887, 1959 and 2001 to track shoreline movement and gain a deeper understanding of how parts of Alexandria’s 50-mile coastline have moved tens of meters inland over the past two decades. By calculating the rate of shoreline retreat over the past century, the researchers studied how the shrinking coastline is raising groundwater levels, bringing them into contact with the foundations of coastal buildings.

Finally, the team analyzed chemical “fingerprints” known as isotopes in soil samples to examine the effects of seawater intrusion. They measured specific isotopes, like B7, in each sample to assess the soil’s mechanical properties. Higher B7 levels indicate stronger, more stable soil, while lower levels suggest erosion.

“Our isotope analysis revealed that buildings are collapsing from the bottom up, as seawater intrusion erodes foundations and weakens the soil. It isn’t the buildings themselves, but the ground underneath them that’s being affected,” said Ibrahim H. Saleh, a soil radiation scientist at Alexandria University and one of the study’s co-authors.

Developing waterways helps the city handle climate extremes and connects people to well-maintained urban spaces, linking the inner city to the coast. The strategy for future coastal resilience in Alexandria includes maintaining, enhancing or restoring a green belt along the coastline. (Illustrations/Courtesy of Essam Heggy and Sara Elsayed)

“Our study demonstrates that coastal buildings are at risk of collapsing even without directly encroaching on the seawater as widely believed,” Heggy added.

A nature-based solution to protect coastal cities

To combat coastal erosion and seawater intrusion, the researchers propose a nature-based solution: creating sand dunes and vegetation barriers along the coastline to block encroaching seawater and hence preventing seawater intrusion from pushing up groundwater levels to building foundations. This sustainable, cost-effective approach can be applied in many coastal densely urbanized regions globally, said Steffen Nijhuis, a landscape-based urbanist from Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands and study co-author.

“Preserving the diverse architectural attributes of Mediterranean historic cities is a powerful reminder of how landscape transformation has played a crucial role in creating climate-resilient societies,” said Udo Weilacher, landscape architect at TUM and study co-author.

“Historic cities like Alexandria, which represent the cradle of cultural exchange, innovation and history, are crucial for safeguarding our shared human heritage,” Heggy said. “As climate change accelerates sea level rise and coastal erosion, protecting them isn’t just about saving buildings; it’s about preserving who we are.”


About the study: Co-authors of the study include Sara S. Fouad and Udo Weilacher of the Technical University of Munich in Germany; Oula Amrouni and Abderraouf Hzami of the National Institute of Marine Sciences and Technologies at the University of Carthage in Tunisia; Steffen Nijhuis of Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands; Nesma Mohamed and Ibrahim H. Saleh of the Institute of Graduate Studies and Research at Alexandria University in Egypt; Seifeddine Jomaa of the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ in Magdeburg, Germany; and Yasser Elsheshtawy of the School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at Columbia University.

This research was funded by the Zumberge Research and Innovation Fund of the University of Southern California, which is allocated to the Arid Climates and Water Research Center (AWARE). Part of this work was also funded by the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and the Technical University of Munich.

Alexandria's coastline, 1935-2022 

Nature-based solutions to combat coastal erosion 

 

Swipe, style, surgery: why dating apps are fuelling cosmetic procedures



University of South Australia
Why dating apps are fuelling cosmetic procedures 

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UniSA researchers Dr John Mingoia and PhD candidate Lauren Conboy say dating app users are far more likely to undergo cosmetic procedures than non users.

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Credit: University of South Australia




They’re the modern way to find love according to the 323 million people who use them worldwide, but dating apps are fuelling an obsession with cosmetic surgery that may not have a happy ending.

new study by researchers at the University of South Australia has shed light on how dating app female users are far more likely to undergo cosmetic procedures and digitally alter their looks on screen than non-users.

The emphasis on appearance, particularly with the swipe-based apps, plays a role in influencing 20% of women to change their looks via dermal fillers and anti-wrinkle injections in particular.

UniSA Bachelor of Psychology (Honours) graduate, and provisional psychologist, Naomi Burkhardt, who led the study published in Computers in Human Behaviour, says that while the increasing popularity of dating apps has reduced the stigma of using them to find love, there is a downside.

“The visual nature of dating apps, which prioritise photo-based profiles, places significant pressure on users to present themselves in an idealised matter which is not genuine,” Burkhardt says.

The researchers surveyed 308 Australian women aged 18 to 72 and found that nearly half of them had used a dating app in the past two years and one in five reported undergoing at least one cosmetic procedure.

Women who used dating apps had significantly more positive attitudes towards cosmetic surgery compared to non-users and those who altered their appearances digitally were also more likely to consider cosmetic procedures.

Apart from the pressures to enhance physical appearance, dating apps could also be partly responsible for an increase in overall body dissatisfaction, eating disorders, anxiety and poor self-esteem among women.

Earlier studies have investigated links between social media use in general and an increased acceptance of cosmetic surgery, but there is little data looking at dating apps specifically.

UniSA co-author Lauren Conboy suggests several interventions to address the psychological impacts of dating apps, including incorporating features that promote authenticity.

“Introducing more personality-based matching algorithms could also be considered to reduce the emphasis on physical looks, and apps could offer built-in body image interventions such as self-compassion exercises to mitigate the pressures to alter one’s appearance.”

Online dating has become increasingly popular in recent years and the trend is expected to continue, with dating website eHarmony predicting that by 2040, more than 70% of relationships will begin online.

UniSA co-author Dr John Mingoia, an online lecturer in psychology, says that dating apps have the potential to create healthier environments, where users can connect without feeling the need to confirm to unrealistic beauty standards.

“Hopefully this research can guide future studies to develop interventions to improve the authenticity of dating app use as well as support practitioners to better identify the motivations for women wanting to change their appearance,” Dr Mingoia says.

Notes for editors

“Swipe, Style, Surgery: Exploring Dating App Use, Self-Presentation Style, and Acceptance of Cosmetic Surgery” is authored by University of South Australia researchers Naomi Burkhardt, Dr John Mingoia and Lauren Conboy 10.1016/j.chb.2025.108568

Journal

WHY DEI?!

Lack of global diversity in criminology education



University of Adelaide





Criminology and criminal justice courses need greater global reflection, inclusion from diverse stakeholders, and deviation from a US-centric approach, according to new research from the University of Adelaide.

“Criminology and criminal justice have long suffered from a siloed approach of teaching methodology – one that favours scholars based in the United States,” explains Dr Jared Dmello from the University of Adelaide.

“This research validates anecdotal evidence from scholars across the world that criminology and criminal justice remain a US-centric field.”

Publishing in the Journal of Criminal Justice Education (JCJE), Dr Dmello conducted the global research in collaboration with Dr Stuti Kokkalera from Sam Houston State University, United States, to analyse the extent of cross-border conversations in the field.

“While organisational leaders seek to move towards a ‘globalised criminology’, findings from this research show that engagement with international scholars in pedagogical discussions remains underrepresented,” Dr Dmello says.

“These findings challenge claims of equal representation — while more scholars are engaging in research focusing on global communities, we found that a closed climate still excludes international voices from educational discourse.”

Within the flagship JCJE, only 9.13 per cent of publications in the sample had an author with a non-US-based affiliation. Of those 65 papers, just 23.08 per cent involved collaboration between authors in the US and another country.

“These findings represent an incredibly small percentage of international representation in discussions within the field’s leading educational journal, despite a plethora of criminologists teaching at highly ranked institutions across the world,” Dr Dmello says.

Dr Dmello explains that criminology and criminal justice programs cover a broad range of topics within relatively short degree timelines, with core areas focusing on policing, courts, and corrections. However, comparative or international criminology and criminal justice are often overlooked in curricula, with the study revealing that fewer than 20 per cent of programs require a course in these areas and almost none make it a mandatory offering.

“Leaders in the field, particularly amongst professional associations, journals, and stakeholder communities, need to more actively consider international and comparative voices as an essential component of diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts,” Dr Dmello says.

“While working groups focusing on internationalisation are important for advancing a ‘global criminology’, failure to actively recruit and retain non-US-based scholars within those efforts serves as a limiting factor, restricting broader engagement and cross-border collaboration.

“The failure to provide a platform for global scholars hinders efforts to decolonise curricula and prevents the sharing of best practices within classrooms that transcend geographic boundaries.”

Dr Dmello says that while some level of underrepresentation was expected, the extent of it was surprising where there is much work needed to move towards a truly global criminology inclusive of voices worldwide, particularly from the Global South.

“Further research is essential on cross-national approaches to educational discourse, representing marginalised populations, and ensuring criminology and criminal justice graduates are prepared for an increasingly globalised world.”

 

Impacts of workplace bullying on sleep can be “contagious” between partners





University of East Anglia





Workplace bullying affects not only the employee’s sleep but their partner’s too, according to new research published today.

Exposure to bullying by superiors and/or colleagues has been linked to a variety of negative health outcomes, such as sleep problems.

Now research by the University of East Anglia (UEA) in the UK, and Complutense University of Madrid and Seville University in Spain, sheds light on the short-term consequences of workplace bullying on various indicators of sleep.

These include waking up too early (sleep severity), interference with daily life (sleep impact) and dissatisfaction with own sleep (sleep satisfaction).

Writing in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence, the researchers aimed to examine how bullying at work impacts insomnia and to test the mediating role of “anger rumination” – which involves repetitive, persistent thinking about distressing events, such as bullying.

They found the relationship between bullying and sleep increases over time, particularly in relation to sleep onset difficulties, staying asleep and early morning awakening, and is explained by work-related anger felt by the employee and this constant rumination.

They also found evidence of insomnia symptoms being “contagious” between employees and their partners, meaning that the sleep issues (both severity and impact) of one person can influence the other, highlighting how interconnected sleep health can be in relationships.

Lead UK author Professor Ana Sanz-Vergel, from UEA's Norwich Business School, said: “Our results show that the effects of workplace bullying are time-dependent and accumulative, and go beyond the individual and the work setting, impacting the partner’s sleep as well.

“When individuals experience bullying at work, they may engage in rumination as a way to mentally process and attempt to cope with the negative events. However, this repeated thinking about distressing events can lead to the development of sleep problems such as difficulties in falling asleep, staying asleep, or sleep impact and satisfaction.

“Therefore, rumination can be seen as a maladaptive coping strategy to deal with workplace bullying, meaning that while this type of reflection may initially seem like a way to resolve issues or understand the situation, it can actually lead to more harm in the long run.”

Current knowledge is limited regarding the short-time impact of bullying processes on sleep and the association between workplace bullying and sleep. This is especially important considering that sleep problems are often immediate or short-term responses to stressful situations. There is also limited information about the effects of bullying beyond the individual experiencing it.

To help address this, the team conducted two studies. In the first, 147 employees were followed over five days, and in the second, 139 couples were followed for a period of two months. In both the participants, all from Spain, had to report on their exposure to workplace bullying, work-related anger rumination and different indicators of insomnia.

The first study showed bullying indirectly affected sleep severity through rumination and in the second, also sleep satisfaction and sleep impact, indicating that rumination is a key factor in how bullying affects various aspects of sleep quality.

“It is very interesting that insomnia is contagious,” said Prof Sanz Vergel. “Partners appear to influence each other's sleep severity and sleep impact, which is not surprising, since one individual's awakening could cause the other to wake up as well.

“If that’s the case, then both of them can feel that lack of sleep interferes with their daily life. Satisfaction with sleep, however, is less susceptible to this contagion, possibly because it involves more subjective elements.”

The authors recommend that interventions around workplace bullying should be designed both at the organizational and individual levels. From an organizational viewpoint, reducing stressors and fostering a healthy organizational culture become crucial.

At the individual level, interventions should be focused on developing skills to help individuals more effectively deal with stressors.

Prof Sanz Vergel added: “Training on how to disconnect from work has proven efficient and has been shown to minimize the effects of bullying. In addition, couple-oriented prevention programs in the context of the workplace are needed – this could help provide coping strategies to both members of the couple, which would in turn reduce rumination levels and insomnia.”

The research was supported by funding from the Spanish Department of Science and Innovation.

‘Your job makes us lose sleep: The effect of workplace bullying on own and partner’s insomnia’, by Rodriguez-Muñoz, A, Antino, M, Ruiz-Zorrilla, P, Sanz-Vergel, A I & León-Pérez, J M, is published in the Journal of Interpersonal Violence.

 

UK peatland fires are supercharging carbon emissions as climate change causes hotter, drier summers




University of Cambridge
Fire on UK moorland 

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The new study led by the University of Cambridge has revealed that as our springs and summers get hotter and drier, the UK wildfire season is being stretched and intensified.

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Credit: Sarah Baker




A new study led by the University of Cambridge has revealed that as our springs and summers get hotter and drier, the UK wildfire season is being stretched and intensified. More fires, taking hold over more months of the year, are causing more carbon to be released into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide.

Fires on peatlands, which are carbon-rich, can almost double global fire-driven carbon emissions. Researchers found that despite accounting for only a quarter of the total UK land area that burns each year, dwarfed by moor and heathland, peatland fires have caused up to 90% of annual UK fire-driven carbon emissions since 2001 – with emissions spikes in particularly dry years.

Peat only burns when it’s hot and dry enough - conditions that are occurring more often with climate change. The peatlands of Saddleworth Moor in the Peak District, and Flow Country in northern Scotland, have both been affected by huge wildfires in recent years.

The researchers say land-managers can play an important role in helping to achieve Net Zero climate goals by keeping peatlands wet. This will reduce the likelihood of intense fires and their associated high carbon emissions.

Unlike heather moorland which takes up to twenty years to regrow after a fire, burnt peatland can take centuries to reaccumulate. The loss of this valuable carbon store makes the increasing wildfire frequency on peatlands a real cause for concern. 

The researchers also calculated that carbon emissions from fires on UK peatland are likely to rise by at least 60% if the planet warms by 2oC. 

The findings, which are broadly relevant to peatlands in temperate climates, are published today in the journal Environmental Research Letters.

“We found that peatland fires are responsible for a disproportionately large amount of the carbon emissions caused by UK wildfires, which we project will increase even more with climate change,” said Dr Adam Pellegrini in the University of Cambridge’s Department of Plant Sciences, senior author of the study.

He added: “Peatland reaccumulates lost carbon so slowly as it recovers after a wildfire that this process is limited for climate change mitigation. We need to focus on preventing that peat from burning in the first place, by re-wetting peatlands.”

The researchers found that the UK’s ‘fire season’ - when fires occur on natural land - has lengthened dramatically since 2011, from between one and four months in the years 2011-2016 to between six and nine months in the years 2017-2021. The change is particularly marked in Scotland, where almost half of all UK fires occur.

Nine percent of the UK is covered by peatland, which in a healthy condition removes over three million tonnes of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere per year. 

The researchers estimate 800,000 tonnes of carbon were emitted from fires on UK peatlands between 2001 and 2021. The 2018 Saddleworth Moor fire emitted 24,000 tonnes of carbon, and the 2019 Flow Country fire emitted 96,000 tonnes of carbon from burning peat.

To get their results, the researchers mapped all UK wildfires over a period of 20 years – assessing where they burn, how much carbon they emit, and how climate change is affecting fires. This involved combining data on fire locations, vegetation type and carbon content, soil moisture, and peat depth. Using UK Met Office data, the also team used simulated climate conditions to predict how wildfires in the UK will change in the future.

The study only considered land where wildfires have occurred in the past, and did not consider the future increases in burned area that are likely to occur with hotter, drier UK summers.

Rewetting peatlands to protecting the carbon they store will require land managers to be incentivised – the researchers say this won’t be easy, but the impact could be big.

“Buffering the UK’s peatlands against really hot, dry summers is a great way to reduce carbon emissions as part of our goal to reach net zero. Humans are capable of incredible things when we’re incentivised to do them,” said Pellegrini.

An average of 5,600 hectares of moor and heathland burns across the UK each year, compared to 2,500 hectares of peatland.

Dr Adam Pellegrini in the University of Cambridge’s Department of Plant Sciences said peatland fires are responsible for a disproportionately large amount of the carbon emissions caused by UK wildfires.

Credit

University of Cambridge