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Volcanic winter
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A volcanic winter is the reduction in temperature caused by volcanic ash and droplets of sulfuric acid obscuring the sun, usually following a volcanic eruption.
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Effects on life
* 2 Ancient case of volcanic winters
* 3 Recent cases of volcanic winter
* 4 References
* 5 Further reading
* 6 See also
[edit] Effects on life
The causes of the bottleneck phenomenon, i.e., a sharp decrease in a species' population immediately followed by a period of great genetic divergence (differentiation) among survivors—might be attributed to volcanic winters. According to anthropologist Stanley Ambrose, such events diminish the population size to "levels low enough for evolutionary changes, which occur much faster in small populations, to produce rapid population differentiation."
[edit] Ancient case of volcanic winters
One proposed volcanic winter happened around 71,000–73,000 years ago following the supereruption of Lake Toba on Sumatra island in Indonesia. In the following 6 years there was the highest amount of volcanic sulphur deposited in the last 110,000 years, possibly causing significant deforestation in Southeast Asia and the cooling of global temperatures by 1°C [1] . Some scientists hypothesize the eruption caused an immediate return to a glacial climate regime by accelerating an ongoing continental glaciation, thereby causing massive population reduction among animals and human beings on Earth. Others argue that the climatic effects of the eruption were too weak and brief to impact early human populations to the degree proposed. [2]
This, combined with the fact that most human differentiations abruptly occurred at that same period, is a probable case of bottleneck linked to volcanic winters (see Toba catastrophe theory). On average, super-eruptions with total eruptive masses of at least 10^15 kg (Toba eruptive mass=6.9*10^15 kg) occur every 1 million years. [3]
[edit] Recent cases of volcanic winter
Pinatubo early eruption 1991
Pinatubo early eruption 1991
The scales of recent winters are more modest but their effects can be significant. A paper written by Benjamin Franklin in 1783 blamed the unusually cool summer of 1783 on volcanic dust coming from Iceland, where the eruption of Laki volcano had released enormous amounts of sulfur dioxide, resulting in the death of much of the island's livestock and a catastrophic famine which killed a quarter of the population. Temperatures in the northern hemisphere dropped by about 1°C in the year following the Laki eruption.
The 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora, a stratovolcano in Indonesia, occasioned mid-summer frosts in New York State and June snowfalls in New England in what came to be known as the "Year Without a Summer" of 1816.
In 1883, the explosion of Krakatoa (Krakatau) also created volcanic winter-like conditions. The next four years after the explosion were unusually cold, and the winter of 1888 was the first time snow fell in the area. Record snowfalls were recorded worldwide.
Most recently, the 1991 explosion of Mount Pinatubo, another stratovolcano, in the Philippines cooled global temperatures for about 2-3 years, interrupting the trend of global warming which had been evident since about 1970. [4]
[edit] References
1. ^ C. Oppenheimer, 2002, Limited global change due to the largest known Quaternary eruption, Toba ~~ 74 Kyr BP, Quaternary Science Reviews, 21, 1593-1609
2. ^ Oppenheimer (2002)
3. ^ B.G. Mason, D.M. Pyle, and C. Oppenheimer, 2004, The size and frequency of the largest explosive eruptions on Earth, The Bulletin of Volcanology, 66 (8), 735-748.
4. ^ [Brohan, P., J.J. Kennedy, I. Haris, S.F.B. Tett and P.D. Jones (2006). "Uncertainty estimates in regional and global observed temperature changes: a new dataset from 1850". J. Geophysical Research 111: D12106. doi:10.1029/2005JD006548. ]
[edit] Further reading
* MR Rampino, S Self & RB Stothers (1988). "Volcanic winters". Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Science 16: 73-99. doi:10.1146/annurev.ea.16.050188.000445.
* C. Oppenheimer, 2002, Limited global change due to the largest known Quaternary eruption, Toba ~~ 74 Kyr BP, Quaternary Science Reviews, 21, 1593-1609.
[edit] See also
* Nuclear winter
* Climate changes of 535-536
* Year Without a Summer
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanic_winter"
Categories: Volcanic events | Volcanology | Climatology
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2007-11-24 10:22:27
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answer #1
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answered by Loren S 7
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Uh, yes. You could say that. Yellowstone is a giant even by volcano standards. It would blow with the force of a nuclear war. If it were to erupt the dust and ash that it would throw into the air would blot out the sun on the way up turning day into night and causing a nuclear winter, and choke you on the way down filling your lungs with poison fumes and suffocating dust. It would effect the entire world, killing millions. America would be destroyed as a nation and as a super power, and the rest of the world would be plunged into a post apocalyptic state lasting decades, if not centuries. I believe that the appropriate quotation here would be: "and, lo, there was a great earthquake; and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair, and the moon became as blood"
2016-04-05 07:14:01
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answer #2
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answered by Jane 4
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