The 1831 CE mystery eruption identified as Zavaritskii caldera, Simushir Island (Kurils).
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
January 7, 2025
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Hutchison, William | |
Sugden, Patrick | |
Burke, Andrea | |
Ponomareva, Vera V | |
Dirksen, Oleg | |
Portnyagin, Maxim V | |
MacInnes, Breanyn | |
Bourgeois, Joanne | |
Fitzhugh, Ben | |
Verkerk, Magali | |
Aubry, Thomas J | |
Engwell, Samantha L | |
Svensson, Anders | |
Chellman, Nathan J | |
McConnell, Joseph R | |
Davies, Siwan | |
Plunkett, Gill |
Subject(s)
Series
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1091-6490
0027-8424
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
39793052
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Polar ice cores and historical records evidence a large-magnitude volcanic eruption in 1831 CE. This event was estimated to have injected ~13 Tg of sulfur (S) into the stratosphere which produced various atmospheric optical phenomena and led to Northern Hemisphere climate cooling of ~1 °C. The source of this volcanic event remains enigmatic, though one hypothesis has linked it to a modest phreatomagmatic eruption of Ferdinandea in the Strait of Sicily, which may have emitted additional S through magma-crust interactions with evaporite rocks. Here, we undertake a high-resolution multiproxy geochemical analysis of ice-core archives spanning the 1831 CE volcanic event. S isotopes confirm a major Northern Hemisphere stratospheric eruption but, importantly, rule out significant contributions from external evaporite S. In multiple ice cores, we identify cryptotephra layers of low K andesite-dacite glass shards occurring in summer 1831 CE and immediately prior to the stratospheric S fallout. This tephra matches the chemistry of the youngest Plinian eruption of Zavaritskii, a remote nested caldera on Simushir Island (Kurils). Radiocarbon ages confirm a recent (<300 y) eruption of Zavaritskii, and erupted volume estimates are consistent with a magnitude 5 to 6 event. The reconstructed radiative forcing of Zavaritskii (-2 ± 1 W m-2) is comparable to the 1991 CE Pinatubo eruption and can readily account for the climate cooling in 1831-1833 CE. These data provide compelling evidence that Zavaritskii was the source of the 1831 CE mystery eruption and solve a confounding case of multiple closely spaced observed and unobserved volcanic eruptions.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| hutchison-et-al-2024-the-1831-ce-mystery-eruption-identified-as-zavaritskii-caldera-simushir-island-(kurils).pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 1.66 MB | published |