Toba supervolcano: Ancient eruption had surprisingly mild impact on climate

Toba supervolcano: Ancient eruption had surprisingly mild impact on climate

Toba supervolcano: Ancient eruption had surprisingly mild impact on climate

Volcano eruptions can influence the climate by releasing sulphur dioxide

Shutterstock/Daniel Lopez Toriello

The largest volcanic eruption in human history resulted in a few years of warm weather, according to an analysis of ancient sediments, and not a severe volcanic winter as some researchers had thought.

The Toba supervolcano, located on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, erupted 74,000 years ago, shooting thousands of cubic kilometres of volcanic material into the atmosphere.

“There is no doubt that the Toba super-eruption was colossal,” says Michael Petraglia

View Source Here

Science

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Apple Maps’ Restaurant Recommendations Just Got a Little Bit Fancier
The Biggest Bookish News of the Week
Kali Uchis Announces the Sincerely, Tour
Baby with rare disease given world-first personal CRISPR gene therapy
Retirement Is the New Resistance