'Mystery' volcano that cooled the ancient world traced to El Salvador
By Katherine Kornei
Aug. 16, 2019 , 8:00 AM
The sixth century was a rough time to be alive: Lower-than-average temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere triggered crop failure, famine, and maybe even the onset of bubonic plague. The ultimate culprit, scientists say, were two back-to-back volcanic eruptionsone in 536 C.E. and another around 540 C.E. The first likely happened in Iceland or North America. But the location of the second one has remained a mysteryuntil now.
Researchers studying ancient deposits from El Salvadors Ilopango volcano knew that a massive eruption had taken place there sometime between the third and sixth centuries. That event, dubbed Tierra Blanca Joven (TBJ), or white young earth, sent a volcanic plume towering nearly 50 kilometers into the atmosphere.
To better pin down the date of this eruption, the scientists collected slices from three tree trunks embedded in TBJ volcanic ash 25 to 30 kilometers from the present-day lake that covers the caldera (above). The tropical hardwood trees likely died after being engulfed by the searing hot, gale-force winds containing the volcanic gases, ash, and pumice that would have swept outward after the eruption.
Back in the lab, the researchers estimated the ages of different parts of the slices by counting their rings and using carbon-14 dating. The multiple measurements yielded much more precise dates than could have been gotten from single measurements.
More:
https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/08/mystery-volcano-cooled-ancient-world-traced-el-salvador
Science:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/122865502
Lake Ilopango
Many images of Ilopango, the huge lake in the crater, and the articles at google images:
https://tinyurl.com/y6ogb25p