Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Toba supereruption and global climate

07.05.21 | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Nikon Monarch 5 8x42 Binoculars

Nikon Monarch 5 8x42 Binoculars deliver bright, sharp views for wildlife surveys, eclipse chases, and quick star-field scans at dark sites.


The Younger Toba Tuff supereruption likely caused severe global climate disruption, but early humans were sheltered from the worst effects, according to a study. The eruption of the Toba volcano in Indonesia around 74,000 years ago was the largest volcanic eruption in the past 2 million years, but its impacts on climate and human evolution remain unclear. Benjamin Black and colleagues ran an ensemble of 42 global climate model simulations with various parameters for the magnitude of sulfur emissions, time-of-year of the eruption, background climate state, and sulfur injection altitude to make a probabilistic assessment of the range of climate disruptions the Toba eruption may have caused. The results suggest there was significant regional variation in climate impacts. The simulations predicted cooling in the Northern Hemisphere of at least 4 °C, with regional cooling as high as 10 °C, depending on the model parameters. In contrast, even under the most severe eruption conditions, cooling in the Southern Hemisphere was unlikely to exceed 4 °C, although regions in southern Africa and India may have experienced changes in precipitation at the highest sulfur emission level. The results corroborate independent archaeological evidence suggesting that early humans in these regions thrived through the Toba eruption interval. According to the authors, the ensemble simulation approach could be used to better understand other past and future explosive eruptions.

###

Article #2020-13046 "Global climate disruption and regional climate shelters after the Toba supereruption," by Benjamin A. Black, Jean-François Lamarque, Daniel R. Marsh, Anja Schmidt, and Charles Bardeen

MEDIA CONTACTS: Benjamin A. Black, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ; tel: 617-710-9131; email: < bblack@eps.rutgers.edu >; Jean-François Lamarque, National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO; tel: 303-497-1495; email: < lamar@ucar.edu >

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Benjamin A. Black
bblack@eps.rutgers.edu

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (2021, July 5). Toba supereruption and global climate. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LPE2GK08/toba-supereruption-and-global-climate.html
MLA:
"Toba supereruption and global climate." Brightsurf News, Jul. 5 2021, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LPE2GK08/toba-supereruption-and-global-climate.html.