The 1831 CE mystery eruption identified as Zavaritskii caldera, Simushir Island (Kurils)

William Hutchison*, Patrick Sugden, Andrea Burke, Peter Abbott, Vera V. Ponomareva, Oleg Dirksen, Maxim V. Portnyagin, Breanyn MacInnes, Joanne Bourgeois, Ben Fitzhugh, Magali Verkerk, Thomas J. Aubry, Samantha L. Engwell, Anders Svensson, Nathan J. Chellman, Joseph R. McConnell, Siwan Davies, Michael Sigl, Gill Plunkett

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Polar ice cores and historical records evidence a large-magnitude volcanic eruption in 1831 CE. This event was estimated to have injected ~13 Tg of sulfur (S) into the stratosphere which produced various atmospheric optical phenomena and led to Northern Hemisphere climate cooling of ~1 °C. The source of this volcanic event remains enigmatic, though one hypothesis has linked it to a modest phreatomagmatic eruption of Ferdinandea in the Strait of Sicily, which may have emitted additional S through magma–crust interactions with evaporite rocks. Here, we undertake a high-resolution multiproxy geochemical analysis of ice-core archives spanning the 1831 CE volcanic event. S isotopes confirm a major Northern Hemisphere stratospheric eruption but, importantly, rule out significant contributions from external evaporite S. In multiple ice cores, we identify cryptotephra layers of low K andesite-dacite glass shards occurring in summer 1831 CE and immediately prior to the stratospheric S fallout. This tephra matches the chemistry of the youngest Plinian eruption of Zavaritskii, a remote nested caldera on Simushir Island (Kurils). Radiocarbon ages confirm a recent (<300 y) eruption of Zavaritskii, and erupted volume estimates are consistent with a magnitude 5 to 6 event. The reconstructed radiative forcing of Zavaritskii (−2 ± 1 W m−2) is comparable to the 1991 CE Pinatubo eruption and can readily account for the climate cooling in 1831–1833 CE. These data provide compelling evidence that Zavaritskii was the source of the 1831 CE mystery eruption and solve a confounding case of multiple closely spaced observed and unobserved volcanic eruptions.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2416699122
Number of pages10
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume122
Issue number1
Early online date30 Dec 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Volcanoes
  • Climate
  • Ice cores
  • Sulfur isotopes
  • Tephra

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