High-latitude eruptions cast shadow over the African monsoon and the flow of the Nile
Abstract
Nile River records indicate very low flow following the 1783-1784 Laki volcanic eruption, as well as after other high-latitude volcanic eruptions. As shown by climate model simulations of the Laki eruption, significant cooling (-1° to -3°C) of the Northern Hemisphere land masses during the boreal summer of 1783 resulted in a strong dynamical effect of weakening the African and Indian monsoon circulations, with precipitation anomalies of -1 to -3 mm/day over the Sahel of Africa, thus producing the low Nile flow. Future high-latitude eruptions would significantly impact the food and water supplies in these areas. Using observations of the flow of the Nile River, this new understanding is used to support a date of 939 for the beginning of the eruption of the Eldgjá volcano in Iceland, the largest high-latitude eruption of the past 1500 years.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- September 2006
- DOI:
- 10.1029/2006GL027665
- Bibcode:
- 2006GeoRL..3318711O
- Keywords:
-
- Hydrology: Drought;
- Atmospheric Processes: Clouds and aerosols;
- Atmospheric Processes: Precipitation (1854);
- Volcanology: Atmospheric effects (0370);
- Global Change: Abrupt/rapid climate change (4901;
- 8408)