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The Little (Volcanic) Ice Age

October 14, 2015 by janniethestrange 1 Comment

In the chilling case of the volcanic 1810’s, the global ocean-atmospheric system had not recovered from the cooling effect of the 1809 Unknown event when the colossal eruption of Tambora occurred. The aftermath of this eruption, spanning the second half of the decade stands as the most catastrophic sustained weather crisis of the millennium.

In this Oct. 19, 2010 aerial photo, Mount Tambora's 10 kilometers (more than 7 miles) wide and 1 kilometer (half a mile) deep volcanic crater, created by the April 1815 eruption, is shown. Bold farmers routinely ignore orders to evacuate the slopes of live volcanos in Indonesia, but those on Tambora took no chances when history's deadliest mountain rumbled ominously this month, Sept., 2011. (AP Photo/KOMPAS Images, Iwan Setiyawan) EDITORIAL USE ONLY

From this jumping-off point, Gillen D’Arcy Wood explores a wide range of events precipitated by the eruption of Tambora in April of 1815  and not only in the immediate area of destruction in the East Indies, but across the globe. Exhaustively researched and annotated, with a plethora of graphs and photos, this book was a tough slog for me. While it was broken up in chapters with largely geographical focus,  the narrative jumped around quite a bit from scientific data and analysis of connections to social upheaval to musings on how the climate affected art. It’s a rather nimble mind that can make all those associations and I’m afraid I stumbled (a lot) trying to keep up. I don’t think that is so much the fault of the author and I’m not sorry I read this. There was some really entertaining stuff, and not just about the Shelley Circle and the influence of that stormy summer in Geneva in 1816 on literature but also the painting of J. M.W. Turner, and the Chinese poet Li Yuyang. Even in descriptions of pictures were little nuggets unearthing the wide, wide range of this authors breadth of knowledge. I came to wish that this book was actually a series on PBS or one of the big cable channels so that so much of this information could be brought more fully to life. Or maybe I’m just lazy.

Filed Under: Non-Fiction

About janniethestrange

CBR 7

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Comments

  1. faintingviolet says

    October 15, 2015 at 4:30 pm

    Oh this sounds fascinating, but I don’t know that I’m mentally prepared for it.

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