Lunar eclipses illuminate timing and climate impact of medieval volcanism

Archive ouverte

Guillet, Sébastien | Corona, Christophe | Oppenheimer, Clive | Lavigne, Franck | Khodri, Myriam | Ludlow, Francis | Sigl, Michael | Toohey, Matthew | Atkins, Paul, S. | Yang, Zhen | Muranaka, Tomoko | Horikawa, Nobuko | Stoffel, Markus

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Volcanism is a key factor in climate variability from interannual to centennial timescales. Understanding the far-field societal impacts of eruption-forced climaticchange requires firm event chronologies and reliable estimates of both the burden and the altitude (that is, tropospheric versus stratospheric) of volcanic sulfateaerosol. However, despite progress in ice-core dating, uncertainties remain in these key factors. This particularly hinders investigation of the role of temporally clustered large eruptions during the High Medieval Period (HMP, 1100–1300 CE), which have been implicated in the transition from the warm Medieval Climate Anomaly to the Little Ice Age. Here we shed new light on volcanism during the HMP, drawing on analysis of contemporary reports of total lunar eclipses, from which we derive a time series of stratospheric turbidity. By combining this new record with aerosol model simulations and tree-ring-based climate proxies, we refine the estimated dates of five considerable eruptions and associate each with stratospheric aerosol veils. Five further eruptions, including one responsible for high sulfur deposition in Greenland circa 1182 CE, affected only the troposphere and had muted climatic consequences. Our findings offer support for further investigation of the decadal-scale to centennial-scale climate response to volcanic eruptions.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Climatic, weather, and socio-economic conditions corresponding to the mid-17th-century eruption cluster

Archive ouverte | Stoffel, Markus | CCSD

International audience. Abstract. The mid-17th century is characterized by a cluster of explosive volcanic eruptions in the 1630s and 1640s, climatic conditions culminating in the Maunder Minimum, and political inst...

The Eldgjá eruption: timing, long-range impacts and influence on the Christianisation of Iceland

Archive ouverte | Oppenheimer, Clive | CCSD

International audience

Multi-proxy dating the ‘Millennium Eruption’ of Changbaishan to late 946 CE

Archive ouverte | Oppenheimer, Clive | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...