Very interesting. this establishes a time frame for the Little Ice Age beginning around 1250 AD triggered by massive volcanism that lowered global temperatures by an astonishing 2 degrees. It would have induced cooling and it would have also taken some time for all the effects to be worked in. Thus after the initial catastrophe, climate deterioation would have continued into the fourteenth century.
We also know that the end of the effects did not occur until perhaps 1800 AD which is 400 years later. Yet this alll could be bacause of a lower base been impacted by local volcanism.
What i do know is that the impact of global volcanism needs to be a priority in terms of modeling and research...
.
We also know that the end of the effects did not occur until perhaps 1800 AD which is 400 years later. Yet this alll could be bacause of a lower base been impacted by local volcanism.
What i do know is that the impact of global volcanism needs to be a priority in terms of modeling and research...
.
1257 AD Eruption of Indonesian Volcano Caused Stark Climatic and Cultural Changes in the Southeast
https://peopleofonefire.com/1257-ad-eruption-of-indonesian-volcano-caused-stark-climatic-and-cultural-changes-in-the-southeast.html
An international research
team has recently discovered that the explosive eruption of the Samalas
Caldera on Lombok Island in Indonesia caused a volcanic winter between
1258 through 1261 throughout most of the Earth. It was by far the
largest volcanic eruption since the end of the last Ice Age about 10,000
years. The volcanic winter caused massive famines in Western Europe, a
drought that ultimately wiped out the Chaco Canyon, Cahokia and
Moundville Cultures, plus brought heavy snows and torrential rains to
the Lower Southeast. It ushered in a period, known as the Little Ice
Age.
During the late 20th
century, archaeologists working on sites throughout the United States
and Mesoamerica noticed that at several points during the past 2000
years, there were synchronized cultural changes throughout North America
and Mesoamerica. In other words, civilizations rose and fell at the
same time. The explosive growth of Teotihuacan in Central Mexico, the
Classic Maya Civilization, the Swift Creek Culture towns in South
Georgia and the Hopewell Culture in Ohio began at around 200 AD and then
collapsed around 550-600 AD.
The Mayas rose again. Teotihuacan, the
Hopewell Culture and the Swift Creek Culture did not. The Swift Creek
towns north of the Georgia Fall Line continued for about 50-100 years,
but were ultimately abandoned. However, the Swift Creek Culture peoples
were still around because their pottery traditions continued to evolve.
They were the ancestors of several branches of the Creek Indians.
The founding of the Toltec capital of
Tula, the founding of a trading town on the Ocmulgee River, the arrival
of an advanced people in Chaco Canyon and formation of a single advanced
culture in the southern tip of Florida all occurred around 900 AD. All
four of these cultures collapsed around 1150 AD.
In the early 21st century
scientists finally explained the collapse of cultures around 550 AD and
1150 AD. In 539 AD, a 100+ feet high tsunami from a asteroid or comet,
striking the Atlantic off the coast of Cape Canaveral, Florida sent
flood waters deep into the coastal plain of Georgia and erased the
barrier islands of north Florida. Along the Georgia Coast one can still
see the debris ridge from the tsunami. It is over 85 feet high near
Darien, GA.
Volcanoes are the culprits in most of
these cultural changes. The eruptions of several large volcanoes in
Iceland, Mexico and Central America closely followed the tsunami. They
caused volcanic winters in the Northern hemisphere, which then caused
poor crop-growing conditions, famines and plagues.
The Justinian Plague
(541 AD – 543 AD) killed about 25% of the Eastern Roman Empire. The
eruption of the Chichon Supervolcano in 800 AD incinerated Palenque and
wiped out the food growing capacity of the Chiapas Highlands . . .
causing the surviving Itza Mayas to disperse across their known world.
Volcanoes in central and northern Mexico triggered a drought and social
instability in northern Mexico and the Southwestern United States
around 1150 AD. Somehow, this cultural instability also caused the
abandonment of the acropolis at Ocmulgee and all of the towns around
Lake Okeechobee, Florida.
Unexplained contradictions in climate and cultural change
There was another stark change in what
is now the United States between around 1150 AD and 1375 AD, which until
recently could not be explained. Advanced indigenous cultures began
collapsing in northern New Mexico around 1150 AD. The line of the grim
reaper moved steadily eastward to reach Cahokia by around 1250 AD.
Astonishingly, archaeologists now believe that the “big boom” at
Cahokia around 1150 AD was caused by a spreading drought from the west,
which minimized the great floods, typical of the Mississippi Basin.
Catastrophic floods began hitting Cahokia, but then that period was
followed by droughts and the Middle Mississippi Basin’s ultimate
abandonment.
The drought hit Moundville, Alabama
about 50 years later. For a period of time, when Cahokia was virtually
abandoned, Moundville was the largest town north of central Mexico.
Biologists, who have studied tree rings in North America, now know that
the Great Drought never went farther than a line running north-south
through central Tennessee and central Alabama. In Georgia, geologists
have found the presences of massive floods around 1250 AD which
destroyed the heart of the first town at Etula (Etowah Mounds) and
turned both Etula and Ichesi (Lamar Village in Macon) into islands.
Mound A at Etowah is located at the northern edge of the original town.
Here is the mystery. While the
western part of North America and the Middle Mississippi Basin
stagnated, the Lower Mississippi Basin, eastern Tennessee, western North
Carolina, most of Georgia and the Florida Panhandle became the most
advanced cultures north of central Mexico. The mounds were much more
modest in scale in the Southeast at this time, but agricultural
technology became more sophisticated and diversified. The people wore
woven cloths. Metal tools and weapons were common. Leaders wore copper
breast plates into battle, while soldiers in North Georgia wore leather
helmets with copper crests and carried shields.
Then around 1500 AD, most of the towns
in the North Carolina Mountains, north of what is now Cherokee, NC were
abandoned. Many large towns in the Piedmont and Southern Highlands were
abandoned between around 1585 and 1600 AD. This phenomenon has been
interpreted by archaeologists as being caused by European plagues.
Perhaps, but in fact, the “glory days” of the Apalache Kingdom in
Northeast Georgia occurred between then and around 1670 . . . then the
Apalache Kingdom suddenly disappeared from the maps in 1690 AD. The end
was so sudden and complete that 20th century anthropologists couldn’t believe it ever existed.
Academicians also tend to not believe the 16th, 17th and 18th
century descriptions of the Lower Southeast. The North Georgia
Mountains were called the Snowy Mountains by the Creeks because they
received some of the heaviest snowfall in eastern North America. When
the snow melted, South Georgia flooded like the Amazon Basin. This is
why the rivers had very different channels than today. Even as late as
1776, William Bartram reported that the Okefenokee Swamp tripled in size
during the spring and that the Satilla River connected the Altamaha
River with the Atlantic Ocean. He identified and cultivated several
flowering shrubs there that no longer exist in the wild.
Meanwhile, a
broad swath of southern South Carolina was arid and uninhabitable.
Early colonists called it the Saluda Desert.
Most academicians have consistently dissed the portrayal of large lakes along the Fall Lines of Georgia and South Carolina on 16th and 17th
century maps. Yet there are several reliable eyewitness accounts of
these lakes. Their remnants remain today as swamps. They were probably
created by the 539 AD tsunami or the catastrophic rains of around 1250
AD. The most likely explanation is that violent storms deposited log
jams, which turned into natural dams.
It was the Little Ice Age
The scientific team that identified the
1257 AD eruption of the Samalas Super-volcano now realize that its dust
and sulfur laden aerosol was so devastating to the world’s climatic
systems that they could not recover enough to bounce back from later
volcanic eruptions. The world’s median temperature dropped 2° C. Wind
patterns changed, which isolated sections of the Southeast into very
different climatic zones like snow belts, rain forests and sandy
deserts. .
South Georgia became semi-tropical,
while North Georgia and Western North Carolina had climates like the
Snowbelt today 600 miles to the north. In contrast the Mid-Atlantic
States experienced extremely dry conditions . . . unfortunately at the
same time between 1585 and 1610, when England was trying to establish a
colony in Virginia. The abandonment of agricultural towns in the more
northerly North Carolina Mountains around 1500 AD was due to a chilling
of the weather, which made it impossible to grow corn, beans and squash.
The dates for peak periods of cold
weather or drought in eastern North America correspond exactly to stark
cultural changes among indigenous peoples in the Southeastern United
States . . . 1250 AD – 1375 AD – 1500 AD – 1585 AD – 1670 AD – 1780 AD.
After then the climate began to warm rapidly and returned to the
patterns we had until about 25 years ago. The peak weekend for leaf
color in the Southern Appalachians is no longer October 16. It is now
about November 10.
Can it happen again?
Yep . . . Mount St. Helens erupted in 1984.
The winter of 1984-1985 in the Southern Appalachians was unbelievable.
Snow stayed on the pasture of our farm in the Reems Creek Valley near
Asheville for four months. On February 15, 1985 our thermometer read
-25° F. It was -43° F. a few miles to the north on Mt. Mitchell. We
had 24 inches of snow on May 8 and snow flurries on June 6. Our first
frost was on September 6. That translates into a 92 day growing season,
which would have been too short for Indian corn and squash.
The year of 1985 was apocalyptic. We
had no measurable precipitation from February 11 (I inch of snow) until
June 19. The leaves did not come on the trees until the last week in
June. Twenty-six out of the 29 cow dairies in Buncombe County, NC went
out of business. Our licensed goat cheese creamy stayed in business
because I daily hiked the goats up to the high pasture (3,200 feet)
where “Last of the Mohicans” would be filmed five years later. Early
morning fogs kept the grass on the high pasture alive. I also harvested
kudzu vines, wherever I could find them.
The two year combination of a short
growing season and drought, would have been more than sufficient to
drive out all Native American agricultural peoples from the French Broad
Valley. I think that is what happened in 1500 AD.
Mount Pinatubo erupted in the Philippine Islands from 1991 to 1992.
In mid-March 1993 a counter cyclone winter hurricane formed over the
Gulf of Mexico then marched northeastward along the Appalachian
Mountains. Its “engine” was driven, not by warm, moist air, but by
super-cold air sucked down from the stratosphere. Regions of Dixie that
rarely even see snow flurries were plastered by 12-24” snow covers and
hurricane force winds. Dozens of hikers were trapped in the mountains,
wearing only tee shirts and shorts. Twenty-four died. A total of 208
people were killed by the storm. Mount LeConte in the Smokey Mountains
had 69” of snow.
Our farm in the Shenandoah Valley had
38” of snow, plus 15 feet drifts against the barn. Numerous lightning
bolts struck the pastures, while the blinding snow was blowing at up to
60 mph. My tractor was completely covered in snow for a week, even
though it was under a shed. We couldn’t get off the farm for two weeks,
except on cross country ski’s, because the county snow scrapers had
deposited a 12 feet high snow bank at our driveway entrance.
No comments:
Post a Comment