A combination of rare atmospheric and ecological factors may have triggered the spread of the Black Death to Europe in the 1340s, scientists claim. A team of researchers has found that the onset of a cold and wet summer climate around this time coincided with the eruption or cluster of eruptions of at least one large volcano.
This climate shift likely led to widespread crop failures and associated famine across parts of Spain, southern France, Egypt, and northern Italy. However, small urban centers like Bologna, Florence, Genoa, Siena, and Venice relied heavily on a complex grain supply system that brought them grain from the Mongols of the Golden Horde via trade routes along the Black Sea coast.
Unfortunately for these cities, their reliance on this food supply also brought Yersinia pestis with them - the bacterium responsible for the plague. According to Ulf BΓΌntgen, co-author of the study, "this is something I've wanted to understand for a long time... Why did it happen at this exact time and place in European history?" His team reconstructed summer temperatures using tree samples from eight European sites and compared them with geochemical analyses of ice core samples.
The results suggest that unusually cold or wet summers occurred three consecutive years (1345, 1346, and 1347) - conditions indicated by "blue rings" on the trees. The textual sources also referenced details like unusual cloudiness and darkened lunar eclipses, which were after-effects of volcanic activity.
This study highlights the risks of a globalized world, where disease transmission can occur more easily in an interconnected network of cities. It emphasizes the need for interdisciplinary research to understand how zoonotic diseases emerge under climate change, leading to pandemics like COVID-19.
This climate shift likely led to widespread crop failures and associated famine across parts of Spain, southern France, Egypt, and northern Italy. However, small urban centers like Bologna, Florence, Genoa, Siena, and Venice relied heavily on a complex grain supply system that brought them grain from the Mongols of the Golden Horde via trade routes along the Black Sea coast.
Unfortunately for these cities, their reliance on this food supply also brought Yersinia pestis with them - the bacterium responsible for the plague. According to Ulf BΓΌntgen, co-author of the study, "this is something I've wanted to understand for a long time... Why did it happen at this exact time and place in European history?" His team reconstructed summer temperatures using tree samples from eight European sites and compared them with geochemical analyses of ice core samples.
The results suggest that unusually cold or wet summers occurred three consecutive years (1345, 1346, and 1347) - conditions indicated by "blue rings" on the trees. The textual sources also referenced details like unusual cloudiness and darkened lunar eclipses, which were after-effects of volcanic activity.
This study highlights the risks of a globalized world, where disease transmission can occur more easily in an interconnected network of cities. It emphasizes the need for interdisciplinary research to understand how zoonotic diseases emerge under climate change, leading to pandemics like COVID-19.