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‘Mystery Volcano’ that Lowered Global Temperatures Nearly 2 degrees Fahrenheit in 1831 Identified

‘Mystery Volcano’ that Lowered Global Temperatures Nearly 2 degrees Fahrenheit in 1831 Identified

Meanwhile “Great Rift” volcano in Ethiopia erupts after seismic swarm, leading to evacuations.

Whenever I write about climate change, I often note that volcanoes can have significant impacts on the global climate.

A new example has been recently revealed, as a ‘mystery volcano’ that erupted in 1831 and significantly cooled Earth’s climate has finally been identified as Zavaritskii on Simushir Island, part of the Kuril Islands archipelago between Russia and Japan.

This eruption was one of the most powerful of the 19th century, releasing an enormous amount of sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere. The Earth-caused emissions resulted in a decrease of approximately one degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) in the annual average temperatures of the Northern Hemisphere.

The challenge in locating the volcano was due to its remote location.

While the year of this historic eruption was known, the volcano’s location was not. Researchers recently solved that puzzle by sampling ice cores in Greenland, peering back in time through the cores’ layers to examine sulfur isotopes, grains of ash and tiny volcanic glass shards deposited between 1831 and 1834.

Using geochemistry, radioactive dating and computer modeling to map particles’ trajectories, the scientists linked the 1831 eruption to an island volcano in the northwest Pacific Ocean, they reported Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

..Before the scientists’ findings, Zavaritskii’s last known eruption was in 800 BC.

“For many of Earth’s volcanoes, particularly those in remote areas, we have a very poor understanding of their eruptive history,” said lead study author Dr. William Hutchison, a principal research fellow in the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of St. Andrews in the United Kingdom.

“Zavaritskii is located on an extremely remote island between Japan and Russia. No one lives there and historical records are limited to a handful of diaries from ships that passed these islands every few years,” Hutchison told CNN in an email.

To find the volcano, researchers compared the chemistry of microscopic shards of ash extracted from ice cores drilled in Greenland with samples from the Zavaritskii caldera. They determined it was a perfect match.

“Finding the match took a long time and required extensive collaboration with colleagues from Japan and Russia, who sent us samples collected from these remote volcanoes decades ago,” Hutchison says.

“The moment in the lab when we analyzed the two ashes together, one from the volcano and one from the ice core, was a genuine eureka moment. I couldn’t believe the numbers were identical. After this, I spent a lot of time delving into the age and size of the eruption in Kuril records to truly convince myself that the match was real.”

Meanwhile, recent volcanic activity at Mount Dofan in Ethiopia has caused significant concern and prompted evacuations in the surrounding area.

Hundreds of people in a rural part of Ethiopia, 165km (100 miles) north-east of the capital, Addis Ababa, have been leaving their homes in panic as a nearby volcano has been showing signs of a possible eruption, a local chief told the BBC’s Afaan Oromoo service.

The smoke coming from Mount Dofan that began around 17:00 local time (14:00 GMT) on Thursday “has a fiery plume and it’s very high,” Sultan Kemil said.

In a video posted by the Ethiopian Geological Institute on its Facebook page steam and debris can be seen shooting out from the mountain.

In recent weeks, there have been more than a dozen seismic events around Awash Fentale – an earthquake-prone area of Ethiopia’s Afar region.

The seismic activity is part of the ongoing geological processes in the Great Rift Valley, where new oceanic crust is being generated.

Personally, I am looking forward to seeing how eco-activists connect the rifting to SUVs.

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Comments


 
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LeftWingLock | January 5, 2025 at 9:26 am

Sue Japan.

How many SUVs would have to travel how far to compensate for the temperature drop?


     
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     1
    navyvet in reply to Brian. | January 5, 2025 at 11:13 am

    Well, now, all the SUVs placed end to end
    Would reach to the moon and back again
    And there’d probably be some poor fool who’d pull out to pass

    Hat tip: Jerry Reed, Lord Mr. Ford

“Using geochemistry, radioactive dating and computer modeling to map particles’ trajectories, the scientists linked the 1831 eruption to an island volcano in the northwest Pacific Ocean, they reported Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.”

Very impressive detective work.


     
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     1
    henrybowman in reply to LB1901. | January 5, 2025 at 2:37 pm

    Climate sCiENtiSts.
    193 years. Guinness Record holder for world’s longest game of Clue.
    I wouldn’t be bitter, did they not continually assure us they can accurately model the monstrous damage my gas range is inflicting upon the Earth.


 
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Wrathchilde | January 5, 2025 at 10:13 am

The idea that humans have a large enough effect to change the global climate has always stuck me as infinitely simplistic. To paraphrase Donald Rumsfeld, we don’t even know what we don’t know about the environment. There are so many feedback loops in the environmental system that we haven’t even acknowledged, let alone investigated that we’re just screaming into the night, hoping we’re right.


     
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    gibbie in reply to Wrathchilde. | January 5, 2025 at 10:24 am

    True, but we have models.
    /s


     
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    Paula in reply to Wrathchilde. | January 5, 2025 at 2:33 pm

    We must be careful not to follow the example of the dinosaurs. They were not good stewards of the environment. They became too large, over ate, over grazed and ultimately became extinct after roaming the earth for a mere 165 millions years. They could’ve made it to 166 million if they had taken measures to stop global warming.

I thought I read Africa is splitting in half. I didn’t read the article because I thought it sounded far fetched. Now I will go do my own modest investigation.


     
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    Crawford in reply to Tom M. | January 5, 2025 at 6:16 pm

    There’s a chain of lakes in Central Africa called the “Rift Lakes”. They’re slowly expanding, as the plates to their east and west move apart. They’re semi-oceans now, with water that’s somewhere between a freshwater lake and ocean water in salt and mineral content.


       
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      henrybowman in reply to Crawford. | January 5, 2025 at 6:50 pm

      I learned something today, thanks. Far from a continent splitter, though… more like a coastal fracture mechanism that will eventually result in new Madagascars and Japans.

Well, there goes the Carbon Tax market – Ice coring is genuine, while modeling depends on how badly the “State” wants to scare we poor citizens into slavery.
All the whining and teeth gnashing of the pseudo-science Gov. funded crowd just went up in smoke- oh no.
Now, if we can just shoot down one of the Geo-engineering planes we are golden.
Al Gores book, after noting his and Maurice Strongs theft of Mr. Revelle’s works, should be re-classified as fiction.
For more interesting facts ( using ice coring,) go to the Name Gordon Fulkes, a non-UN funded astrophysicist, and learn some accurate information.
He lives in Oregon, the Black hole State, regressive in all things and first in most things that matter at the bottom of the intellectual barrel. Orwell called this: Logic verse logic – saying two opposites at the same time.

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