Friday, Apr 19, 2024 | Last Update : 08:27 PM IST

  Did volcano tip Europe into Dark Ages

Did volcano tip Europe into Dark Ages

Published : Apr 25, 2016, 12:06 am IST
Updated : Apr 25, 2016, 12:06 am IST

Back-to-back volcanic eruptions in the mid-6th century dar-kened Europe’s skies for more than a year and may have ushered in the Dark Ages, according to a finding to be presented Friday at a science c

Back-to-back volcanic eruptions in the mid-6th century dar-kened Europe’s skies for more than a year and may have ushered in the Dark Ages, according to a finding to be presented Friday at a science conference in Vienna. “Either would have led to significant cooling of Earth’s surface,” said Matthew Toohey, a climate modeller at the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research in Kiel Germany who led the research. “But taken together, the two eruptions” — in 536 and 540 — “were likely the most powerful volcanic event affecting the northern hemisphere climate over at least the past 1,500 years,” he said at a meeting of the European Geosciences Union.

Their combined impact lowered temperatures by 2°Celsius during what is probably the coldest decade in the last two millennia. This sudden drop, caused by a Sun-blocking blanket of sulphur particles in the stratosphere, had a devastating impact on agriculture, provoking famine throughout much of Europe and beyond.

The continent’s first pandemic plague occu-rred one year after the second blast, though it is not known whether the volcanic winter played a direct role in the disease’s spread, Toohey reported this week in the journal Climatic Change.

More broadly, the twin blasts marked the pivot between the waning years of Antiquity and the prolonged period of social decline and turmoil known as the Dark Ages.

Many contemporary accounts — including one from the Byzantine historian Procopius, who lived in Rome — described the “mystery cloud” that shrouded the skies in 536.

“The Sun gave forth its light without brightness, like the Moon, during this whole year,” he wrote at the time, comparing the impact to an unending eclipse. Historical records attest to devastating famine in the ensuing years, and a broader collapse of social structures across much of northern Europe.

Official histories from China registered strange climate phenomena followed by crop failures and mass starvation. But not until recently did scientists deliver proof that the global solar dimming was caused by two volcanic eruptions. The evidence came from Greenland and Antarctica in the form of ice cores, layered time capsules reaching back thousands of years that preserve particles from the atmosphere. Not only did telltale traces of sulphur pinpoint the dates when the two eruptions occurred, the cores also revealed that the first one happened in the northern hemisphere and the second in the tropics. Coinci-dentally, another team of scientists led by Kees Nooren of Utrecht Univer-sity in the Netherlands reported at the Vienna conference this week that the El Chichon volcano in southern Mexico blew it’s top in 540, contributing to the decline of the Mayan civilisation, then at its apex.