Volcanic winter of 536
The volcanic winter of 536 was among the most severe and protracted episodes of climatic cooling in the Northern Hemisphere in the last two thousand years. The volcanic winter was caused by at least three eruptions of uncertain origin, with several possible locations proposed in various continents. In early AD 536, an eruption ejected great amounts of sulfate aerosols into the atmosphere, reducing the solar radiation reaching the Earth's surface and cooling the atmosphere for several years. In March 536, Constantinople began experiencing darkened skies and lower temperatures.
Summer temperatures in 536 fell by as much as below normal in Europe. The lingering effect of the volcanic winter of 536 was augmented in the years 539 and 540, when another volcanic eruption caused summer temperatures to decline as much as below normal in Europe. There is evidence of still another volcanic eruption in 547 that would have extended the cool period. The volcanic eruptions caused crop failures, and were accompanied by the Plague of Justinian, famine, and millions of deaths and initiated the Late Antique Little Ice Age, which lasted from 536 to 660.
Historian Michael McCormick has called the year 536 "the beginning of one of the worst periods to be alive, if not the worst year."
Documentary evidence
The Roman historian Procopius recorded in his AD 536 report on the wars with the Vandals: "during this year a most dread portent took place. For the sun gave forth its light without brightness... and it seemed exceedingly like the sun in eclipse, for the beams it shed were not clear".In 538, the Roman statesman Cassiodorus described the following to one of his subordinates in letter 25:
- The sun's rays were weak, and they appeared a "bluish" colour.
- At noon, no shadows from people were visible on the ground.
- The heat from the sun was feeble.
- The moon, even when full, was "empty of splendour"
- "A winter without storms, a spring without mildness, and a summer without heat"
- Prolonged frost and unseasonable drought
- The seasons "seem to be all jumbled up together"
- The sky is described as "blended with alien elements" just like cloudy weather, except prolonged. It was "stretched like a hide across the sky" and prevented the "true colours" of the sun and moon from being seen, along with the sun's warmth.
- Frosts during harvest, which made apples harden and grapes sour.
- The need to use stored food to last through the situation.
- Subsequent letters discuss plans to relieve a widespread famine.
Michael the Syrian, a patriarch of the Syriac Orthodox Church, reported that from 536 to 537 the sun shone feebly for a year and a half.
The Irish annals recorded the following:
- "A failure of bread in AD 536" – the Annals of Ulster
- "A failure of bread from AD 536–539" – the Annals of Inisfallen
- "The Battle of Camlann, in which Arthur and Medraut fell, and there was great mortality in Britain and Ireland."
- The Annals of the Tang Dynasty, which mentions the "great cold" and "famine" that occurred in 536.
- The Zizhi Tongjian, a historical text that mentions the "great cold" and the "famine that occurred in the summer."
- The Nan Shi 南史, which describes "a yellow ash-like substance from the sky".
- Low temperatures, even snow during the summer.
- Widespread crop failures.
- "A dense, dry fog" in the Middle East, China and Europe.
- Drought in Peru, which affected the Moche culture.
Scientific evidence
analysis by the dendrochronologist Mike Baillie, of Queen's University Belfast, Ireland, shows abnormally little growth in Irish oak in 536 and another sharp drop in 542, after a partial recovery. Ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica show evidence of substantial sulfate deposits in around 534 ± 2, which is evidence of an extensive acidic dust veil.Possible explanations
It was originally theorized that the climatic changes of AD 536 were caused by either volcanic eruptions or impact events.In 2015, revision of polar ice core chronologies dated sulfate deposits and a cryptotephra layer to the year 536. This is strong evidence that a large explosive volcanic eruption caused the observed dimming and cooling. But Dallas Abbott and her colleagues found spherules containing nickel and copper in an ice core, giving support to an impact event around this time.
The source of volcanic eruption remains to be found but several proposed volcanoes have been rejected:
- R. B. Stothers postulated the volcano Rabaul in New Britain, in Papua New Guinea. The eruption is now thought to have occurred in the interval AD 667–699 based on wiggle-match radiocarbon dating.
- David Keys suggested the volcano Krakatoa by shifting a cataclysm in AD 416 recorded in the Javanese Book of Kings to 535. Drilling projects in the Sunda Strait ruled out any possibility that an eruption took place there during this time period.
- Robert Dull and colleagues proposed the large VEI-7, Tierra Blanca Joven eruption of the Ilopango caldera. Identification of TBJ tephra in ice cores narrowed the eruption date to 429–433.
- Christopher Loveluck and his colleagues proposed Icelandic volcanos based on the shards from a Swiss glacier. However, the cryptotephras dated exactly to AD 536 are geochemically distinct from Icelandic tephra, and the shards in the Swiss glacier have large age uncertainty.
Historic consequences
The 536 event and ensuing famine have been suggested as an explanation for the deposition of hoards of gold by Scandinavian elites at the end of the Migration Period. The gold was possibly a sacrifice to appease the gods and get the sunlight back. Mythological events such as the Fimbulwinter and Ragnarök are theorised to be based on the cultural memory of the event.A book written by David Keys speculates that the climate changes contributed to various developments, such as the emergence of the Plague of Justinian, the decline of the Avars, the migration of Mongol tribes towards the west, the end of the Sasanian Empire, the collapse of the Gupta Empire, the rise of Islam, the expansion of Turkic tribes, and the fall of Teotihuacan. In 2000, a 3BM Television production capitalised upon Keys' book. The documentary, under the name Catastrophe! How the World Changed, was broadcast in the US as part of PBS's Secrets of the Dead series.
However, Keys and Wohletz's ideas lack mainstream acceptance. Reviewing Keys' book, British archaeologist Ken Dark commented that "much of the apparent evidence presented in the book is highly debatable, based on poor sources or simply incorrect.... Nonetheless, both the global scope and the emphasis on the 6th century CE as a time of wide-ranging change are notable, and the book contains some obscure information that will be new to many. However, it fails to demonstrate its central thesis and does not offer a convincing explanation for the many changes discussed".
Philologist Andrew Breeze argues that some Arthurian events, including the Battle of Camlann, are historical, happening in 537 as a consequence of the famine associated with the climate change of the previous year.
Historian Robert Bruton argues that this catastrophe played a role in the decline of the Roman Empire.