Počet záznamů: 1  

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

  1. 1.
    0496041 - ÚVGZ 2019 RIV NL eng J - Článek v odborném periodiku
    Oppenheimer, C. - Orchard, A. - Stoffel, M. - Newfield, T. P. - Guillet, S. - Corona, C. - Sigl, M. - Di Cosmo, N. - Büntgen, Ulf
    The Eldgja eruption: timing, long-range impacts and influence on the Christianisation of Iceland.
    Climatic Change. Roč. 147, č. 3-4 (2018), s. 369-381. ISSN 0165-0009. E-ISSN 1573-1480
    Grant CEP: GA MŠMT(CZ) LO1415
    Institucionální podpora: RVO:86652079
    Klíčová slova: greenland ice-sheet * laki skaftar-fires * millennium eruption * climatic impact * core * sulfur * ash * 10th-century * changbaishan * volcanism
    Obor OECD: Meteorology and atmospheric sciences
    Impakt faktor: 4.168, rok: 2018

    The Eldgja lava flood is considered Iceland's largest volcanic eruption of the Common Era. While it is well established that it occurred after the Settlement of Iceland (circa 874 CE), the date of this great event has remained uncertain. This has hampered investigation of the eruption's impacts, if any, on climate and society. Here, we use high-temporal resolution glaciochemical records from Greenland to show that the eruption began in spring 939 CE and continued, at least episodically, until at least autumn 940 CE. Contemporary chronicles identify the spread of a remarkable haze in 939 CE, and tree ring-based reconstructions reveal pronounced northern hemisphere summer cooling in 940 CE, consistent with the eruption's high yield of sulphur to the atmosphere. Consecutive severe winters and privations may also be associated with climatic effects of the volcanic aerosol veil. Iceland's formal conversion to Christianity dates to 999/1000 CE, within two generations or so of the Eldgja eruption. The end of the pagan pantheon is foretold in Iceland's renowned medieval poem, VC << luspa ('the prophecy of the seeress'). Several lines of the poem describe dramatic eruptive activity and attendant meteorological effects in an allusion to the fiery terminus of the pagan gods. We suggest that they draw on first-hand experiences of the Eldgja eruption and that this retrospection of harrowing volcanic events in the poem was intentional, with the purpose of stimulating Iceland's Christianisation over the latter half of the tenth century.
    Trvalý link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0288858

     
     
Počet záznamů: 1  

  Tyto stránky využívají soubory cookies, které usnadňují jejich prohlížení. Další informace o tom jak používáme cookies.