Periodic Reporting for period 1 - VEILA (Identifying the source of unknown volcanic eruptions in Late Antiquity)
Berichtszeitraum: 2019-02-01 bis 2021-01-31
The methodologically innovative strategies in tephrochronology developed in this framework aimed to correlate polar ice core records to an annually-layered tropical palaeoclimate record for the first time. This will be a crucial proof-of-concept for future studies, further back in time, that may address the timing and mechanisms of global climate teleconnections within such a precisely-dated framework. The results of the proposed research will provide a better understanding of the role of volcanism in centennial-scale climate forcing during the Holocene, giving insights into the impacts of future eruptions on our societies already dealing with the consequences of climate change.
This project aimed to locate and characterise tephra in polar ice and equatorial sediment cores and correlate them to possible volcanic sources of key eruptions in order to constrain the role of volcanism in centennial-scale climate forcing during the Holocene. The outputs will provide insights into the impacts of future eruptions on our societies already dealing with the consequences of climate change.
Before the March 2020 lockdown, CV established a collaboration with Prof. Joe McConnell from the Desert Research Institute (USA), and localised particles of potentially volcanic origin in B54 Antarctica ice cores for the 4.2 ka BP and 682 CE eruptions. Samples were received in November 2020, just before the second lockdown. They have not been extracted nor analysed yet.
CV also initiated a collaboration with Dr. J.L. Fernandez Turiel from the Institute of Earth Sciences J. Almera - CSIC (Spain) to analyse volcanic glass from the 4.2 ka Cerro Blanco eruptive products. Samples have not been analysed yet.
The project has been catastrophically disrupted during the covid-19 pandemic, with the closure of the Department of Geography of the University of Cambridge from 23 March 2020. The extremely restricted reopening of the laboratories from October 2020 has prevented research strategy development, preparation, and analysis of the samples with a key collaborator of the project (Prof. Christine Lane).
No significant conclusions of the action have been drawn at present, but the research activities have resumed with the complete reopening of the labs in October 2021. CV has secured a five-year lectureship at Cambridge and remains affiliated to the Department of Geography for research activities.
The unsuccessful correlation of the Tofua eruption with the volcanic debris found in the mid-15th century Tonga megatsunami discards Tofua volcano as a likely source of the 1458 CE unknown eruption recorded in ice cores during the Little Ice Age. One of the largest volcanically induced climate anomalies of the last millennium remains a mystery.