
Source: Legrain, L. (1936): Ur Excavations Archaic Seal-Impressions.
It is by now almost a cliché to say that climate change is one of the defining challenges of our time. Rising sea levels threaten coastal communities, increasingly frequent heatwaves place pressure on public health systems, prolonged droughts devastate agricultural output, melting glaciers destabilize mountain ecosystems, coral bleaching undermines marine biodiversity, shifting weather patterns disrupt global supply chains, wildfires consume forests at unprecedented rates, permafrost thaw releases methane into the atmosphere, vector-borne diseases expand into new regions, and even the humble European beech tree now finds itself under existential stress in soils that are just slightly too dry, just slightly too warm, and just slightly too unpredictable to sustain its centuries-old rhythms.
And yet — if one may be permitted a moment of deeply irresponsible optimism — climate change has at least one unexpected advantage: as rivers dry up, they occasionally give back what they have hidden for millennia. Such is the case with the Euphrates. Over the past months, an unusually severe drop in water levels has exposed large stretches of the riverbed in southern Iraq. While this in itself is alarming for both ecological and humanitarian reasons, it has also allowed archaeologists to access areas that have long been considered unreachable. And it is here — beneath layers of silt, clay, and the slow accumulation of time — that a discovery has been made which, if confirmed, may fundamentally reshape our understanding of Mesopotamian history. A tomb. Not just any tomb, but one that archaeologists are now cautiously — but increasingly confidently — attributing to the semi-legendary king of Uruk: Gilgamesh.
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