Welcome!
To use the personalized features of this site, please log in or register.
If you have forgotten your username or password, we can help.
My Menu
Saved Items

Research article

The global impact of the Minoan eruption of Santorini, Greece

D. M. Pyle1

(1)  Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, UK, GB
Abstract   The Minoan eruption of Santorini was a large-magnitude natural event. However, in terms of scale it ranks smaller in erupted volume and eruptive intensity than the historical eruption of Tambora in 1815 AD, and smaller in sulphur emission and, by inference, climatic effects than both the Tambora and Mt. Pinatubo, 1991, eruptions. Eruption statistics for the past 2000 years indicate that Minoan-size eruptions typically occur at a rate of several per thousand years. Eruptions resulting in a Minoan-scale injection of sulphur to the stratosphere occur far more frequently – at a rate of one or two per century. Inferences of massive sociological, religious and political impacts from such eruptions owe more to mythology than reality.

Key words Explosive volcanic eruptions - Volcano-climate interaction - Thera - Greece

Received: 28 November 1995 · Accepted: 9 January 1996

Fulltext Preview (Small, Large)
Image of the first page of the fulltext


Export this article
Export this article as RIS | Text
 
Referenced by
1 newer article

  1. Bachmann, O. (2007) Zircon crystallization and recycling in the magma chamber of the rhyolitic Kos Plateau Tuff (Aegean arc). Geology 35(1)
    [CrossRef]
Remote Address: 38.107.191.83 • Server: MPWEB25
HTTP User Agent: CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)