Publication | Open Access
Cold decade (AD 1810–1819) caused by Tambora (1815) and another (1809) stratospheric volcanic eruption
186
Citations
33
References
2009
Year
Volcanic Gas ChemistryVolcanologyCold DecadeEngineeringPolar SnowVolcanismAd 1810–1819Earth ScienceSulfur Isotope AnomalyGeophysicsVolcanic ProcessGeographyGeologyClimate DynamicsTectonicsVolcanic Fumarolesδ 33LaharGeochemistryStratospheric Volcanic EruptionPyroclastic Flow
Climate records indicate that the decade of AD 1810–1819 including “the year without a summer” (1816) is probably the coldest during the past 500 years or longer, and the cause of the climatic extreme has been attributed primarily to the 1815 cataclysmic Tambora eruption in Indonesia. But the cold temperatures in the early part of the decade and the timing of the Tambora eruption call into question the real climatic impact of volcanic eruptions. Here we present new evidence, based on sulfur isotope anomaly (Δ 33 S), a unique indicator of volcanic sulfuric acid produced in the stratosphere and preserved in polar snow, and on the precise timing of the volcanic deposition in both polar regions, that another large eruption in 1809 of a volcano is also stratospheric and occurred in the tropics. The Tambora eruption and the undocumented 1809 eruption are together responsible for the unusually cold decade.
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