http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg22129520.700-ad-536-the-year-that-winter-never-ended.html#.Ut6Pi9LFKIU

In the year 536 the sun dimmed and the world shivered, leading to
famine, plague and the fall of empires. New clues point to an
double-whammy apocalypse

"The sun began to be darkened by day and the moon by night, while the
ocean was tumultuous with spray from the 24th of March in this year
till the 24th of June in the following year... And, as the winter was
a severe one, so much so that from the large and unwonted quantity of
snow the birds perished... there was distress... among men... from the
evil things"
Zacharias of Mytilene (Chronicle, 9.19, 10.1)

THE year is AD 536, and Byzantine historian Procopius of Caesarea has
just arrived in southern Italy. The balance of power in the
Mediterranean is in flux: Vandals had sacked Rome in 455 and the
Western Roman Empire had fallen in 476. Justinian I, the Byzantine (or
Eastern Roman) Emperor, is determined to reclaim the lost territories.
After a successful campaign against the North African Vandal Kingdom
in the early 530s, Justinian dispatches his army to retake Italy.

Yet as Procopius records, something odd then happened. The sun dimmed,
and the dimness lasted for more than a year. There were frosts and
snows in the middle of summer – the winter never really ended. From
Italy to Ireland, China to Central America, the year 536 was the
beginning of a decade-long cold snap beset by turmoil. Religions lost
believers, cities collapsed and one of the greatest plagues in history
killed a quarter of the population in the Byzantine Empire.
Justinian's armies did manage to retake Rome, but his weakened empire
was overstretched, and soon lost the territory again.

In almost every region of the world, this period was marked with bad
weather, social disorder – and death. This climatic downturn may well
have profoundly altered the course of history. The trigger of this
cooling has long been a mystery, but now we may finally be close to
identifying the culprit – or culprits.

The first evidence of the AD 536 event came from a study in the 1980s
by two NASA geologists, Richard Stothers and Michael Rampino. They
trawled through early historical accounts looking for references to
volcanic eruptions around the Mediterranean. They concluded that there
had been at least seven major eruptions before AD 630, including the
one in AD 79 that buried the town of Pompeii.

Yet while there were four accounts – including that of Procopius – of
an 18-month-long period of unusually dim skies, beginning around AD
536, there were no direct references to a volcanic eruption at this
time. Stothers and Rampino concluded that the cause must have been a
massive volcanic eruption thousands of miles from Europe.

This was certainly plausible. The eruption of the Indonesian volcano
of Tambora in 1815, after all, was followed by a "year without a
summer" across the northern hemisphere (and may have given us
Frankenstein and bicycles). The historical accounts suggested that 536
was much more severe than 1816, but could they be trusted?

"All of the ancient texts could be quibbled with," says Michael
Baillie at Queen's University Belfast, UK. But with his help, an
impartial witness to the 6th century events broke its silence in the
late 1980s. Baillie studies tree rings and, using oak preserved in
Irish bogs, he and his colleagues put together a tree-ring record
stretching back more than 7000 years. In 1988, they reported that
during the first millennium AD, the narrowest tree rings – indicating
poor growing conditions and cold temperatures – occurred within a few
years of 536.

"There was a sign in the sun the like of which had never been seen and
reported before... The sun became dark and its darkness lasted for
eighteen months. Each day it shone for about four hours, and still
this light was only a feeble shadow. Everyone declared that the sun
would never recover its full light. The fruits did not ripen and the
wine tasted like sour grapes"
Michael the Syrian (Chronicle, 9.296)

More tree-ring data followed from other groups, and a pattern emerged.
"The narrow tree rings weren't just in European oak. They were in
Scandinavian pines, and in trees from North and South America," says
Baillie. "This pretty much had to be a global event."

But there was something missing. As volcanic ash and sulphur particles
wash out of the atmosphere, they leave traces in the ice forming near
the poles. During the 1980s, ice cores from Greenland were revealing
evidence of many previously unknown eruptions, including a
particularly massive one in 1257. There was, however, no volcanic
signature in ice formed around 536.

The tree rings were also revealing something unexpected. Despite the
emphasis that the historical accounts placed on 536, the tree-ring
recordsuggested growing conditions were awful in the years following
540 as well. In fact, the tree rings showed that the cold snap
continued for a decade. It is very unusual for an eruption to trigger
a decade of cooling, says Baillie, because the ash and sulphur-rich
particles thrown into the atmosphere by a volcano should wash out
again within a few years. The findings got Baillie rethinking the
source of the trouble. "Stothers and Rampino saw the event as evidence
of a volcanic eruption, but perhaps there was another explanation,"
says Baillie (see diagram).

When he found obscure references to unusual partial eclipses in
north-west Europe in 538 and 540, Baillie began to wonder whether the
source of the trouble was not volcanic but extraterrestrial. In 1994,
shortly before fragments of the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 ploughed into
Jupiter, he suggested that dust from a comet that had passed near
Earth – or even collided with our planet – could explain both the
unusually long climatic downturn and the lack of a volcanic signature.

In a 1999 book, Baillie went further, suggesting that several major
climatic changes in the past 10,000 years were triggered by impacts.
He speculated about links with a broad range of historical and even
mythical events, including the death of King Arthur.

The plague of Justinian

What is certain is that the years following 536 were eventful. In
China, for instance, the Northern Wei dynasty collapsed around this
time. "There's written evidence that about 75 per cent of people died
because of cold, crop failure, starvation and droughts," says Payson
Sheets, an archaeologist at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
"There was political and religious turmoil."

In Central America, the population of the huge city state of
Teotihuacan also declined. "The exact dating is up for debate, but by
around 550, the people there were deliberately burning the temples on
the top of their step-pyramids," says Sheets. "They had lost faith in
their rulers' abilities to act as intermediaries between people and
their gods."

And just as Justinian was reconquering the Eastern Roman Empire, his
subjects began dropping like flies. By 542, Procopius was lamenting
what is now known as the Plague of Justinian – an early form of
bubonic plague – which he said was claiming 10,000 lives each day at
its peak.

Were all these disparate events triggered by global cooling? Baillie
thinks they might have been. For instance, the Plague of Justinian
could have been an indirect result of food shortages throughout
Eurasia, which led to the mass movement of people and disease-carrying
rodents. "People were exposed to pathogens they were unfamiliar with,"
he says. "Plague broke out and spread – it's the classic Black Death
scenario."

Proving that specific historical events were triggered by climate
change is nigh on impossible, but painstaking studies by David Zhang
of the University of Hong Kong have shown that there is a strong link
between cooler periods and famine, plague, mass migrations, social
turmoil and even wars (New Scientist, 4 August 2012, p 32). "I believe
it is possible that the decadal-scale cooling in 530s and 540s could
have caused epidemics," Zhang says. "Not only because of the
migrations, but also because famine caused poor health among
populations."

Although we will never know for sure what the historical consequences
were, in 2002 Baillie set about looking for evidence of an
extraterrestrial trigger – such as the solidified droplets of molten
material generated by an impact – in a Greenland ice core. "We found
that it was packed full of glassy and metallic spherules, and I
thought we had our evidence."

But it wasn't to be. There was no trace of similar spherules in a
second ice core. "The spherules in the first ice had to be
contamination," says Baillie – perhaps from the equipment used to
extract the core. By late 2002, then, the 536 event was more enigmatic
than ever: there was growing direct and historical evidence of a
sudden and severe cooling, but there was no sign of what had caused
it. So Bo Vinther at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark and his
colleagues decided to take another look at the ice cores – and in 2008
they reported that there was a subtle but substantial sulphur signal
at 534, give or take a couple of years. The volcanic explanation was
back on the table (Geophysical Research Letters, vol 35, L04708).

It is not actually surprising that earlier investigation of the ice
core record revealed no volcanic signature at 536, says Vinther.
Unless the eruption happens close to the ice sheet and blankets it in
ash, the volcanic signature is likely to be small and subtle. "You
need to be very careful with your measurements if you are going to
detect it," he says.

And this eruption probably didn't happen anywhere near an ice sheet.
Vinther's team found the sulphur traces in ice from both Greenland and
Antarctica. "So the eruption had to have occurred in the tropics," he
says. "Otherwise you wouldn't get a signal in the ice at both poles."

The hunt for the volcano was on – and a suspect soon emerged.
Fortuitously, Steffen Kutterolf at Kiel University in Germany and his
colleagues were reassessing the size of known volcanic eruptions in
Central America by measuring ash deposits. Their work, published
within months of Vinther's study, doubled the estimated size of an
eruption from the Ilopango volcano in El Salvador. We now know this
eruption generated 84 cubic kilometres of ash, says Kutterolf.

"That's huge – one recent estimate puts this eruption as the sixth
largest on the planet during the last 10,000 years," says Robert Dull
at the University of Texas at Austin, who has worked on Ilopango for
years. There was just one problem: carbon dating of plant material
found in the ash pointed to a date sometime around AD 430. That was
100 years too early, but the dating was only provisional.

After reading these studies, Dull teamed up with Kutterolf. The idea
was to pin down the date more precisely by carbon dating the growth
rings in a tree trunk. That meant finding a tree in the ash. In 2010,
the team announced finding a tree that had died sometime between 500
and 550, making a link with 536 a real possibility. In the past two
years, work on other trees has confirmed that the eruption took place
early in the 6th century and points to 535 as the most likely date,
says Dull.

If Ilopango triggered devastating problems across the world, its
effects on Central America must have been nothing short of
apocalyptic. "Draw a circle with a radius of 200 kilometres around
Ilopango, and you're potentially looking at the total wipeout of
people, animals and trees," says Sheets, who has also teamed up with
Dull. The Maya civilisation a few hundred kilometres further north may
have escaped such total destruction, but it did mysteriously stop
building elaborately carved monuments known as stelae, with dated
hieroglyphic texts, in the 530s, says Dull.

Even if the Ilopango eruption did trigger the events of 536, it cannot
easily explain why the cold snap continued for a decade, and why some
of the coldest years came after 540. Was there more than one eruption?
Within the last few months, an analysis of a Greenlandic ice core has
revealed a sulphur signal at 540 – but the signal is only around 15
per cent the strength of the 534 signal. It is debatable whether an
eruption of this size could have had a significant climatic impact.

Enter Dallas Abbott, a geologist at Columbia University in Palisades,
New York. Her team has also been studying ice cores from Greenland –
and they, like Baillie, have found metallic spherules dating to around
536. But they have also found unusually high concentrations of nickel
and tin. Nickel is abundant in extraterrestrial debris and is unlikely
to reflect contamination, Abbott says, because it is not typically
present in the equipment used to collect the ice. The tin, meanwhile,
is suggestive of a comet.

So Abbott's findings have resurrected the comet hypothesis – and she
even has a particular suspect in mind. "We know that Halley's comet
came by Earth in 530," says Abbott. "And the Chinese record indicates
it was unusually bright."

The brightness suggests that on this journey through the inner solar
system, Halley's comet passed particularly close to the sun, she says.
It would have lost more ice than usual, releasing more of the dust and
debris frozen inside. "Halley might have been especially likely to
lose material and make dust in 530," says Abbott.

"And it came about during this year that a most dread portent took
place. For the sun gave forth its light without brightness, like the
moon, during this whole year, and it seemed exceedingly like the sun
in eclipse, for the beams it shed were not clear nor such as it is
accustomed to shed"
Procopius (Wars, 4.14.5)

Each year, Earth passes through two meteor showers produced by dusty
fragments of Halley's comet. Throughout the 530s and into the 540s,
these meteor showers may have been unusually heavy, and continued to
top-up Earth's atmosphere with cooling dust – and perhaps more.

Impact site

There are other surprising clues in the ice. Cores from around the
beginning of 536 contain the frozen remains of microorganisms normally
found in shallow tropical seas, while samples from 538 also contain
fossils of much more ancient marine microorganisms. Abbott thinks
there is only one way these microorganisms could have ended up in
Greenland ice.

Halley's comet might have shed a few especially large fragments during
its journey through the inner solar system in 530. In the following
years, perhaps including 536 and 538, these fragments slammed into
Earth's oceans. When they did, dust and debris – containing living
marine microbes in the water and fossils in the rocks that were struck
– were thrown high into the atmosphere and global temperatures
plummeted.

Abbot's team may have even found where one of these collisions
occurred. Gravity anomalies and metallic spherules in a sediment layer
suggest a large object struck Australia's Gulf of Carpentaria sometime
in the first millennium AD, she says.

Abbott presented her team's findings at two conferences last year and
will be publishing the details soon. However, she still has plenty of
work to do to convince sceptics.

Don Brownlee at the University of Washington in Seattle worked on
NASA's Stardust mission to collect dust from the Wild 2 comet in 2004.
He says there is some evidence that cosmic impacts with Earth can have
a major cooling effect: a brief episode of cooling about 12,800 years
ago has been linked to major impacts at the time, for example. But he
is sceptical that Halley played such a role in the 6th century,
because the famous comet's history over the last few thousand years is
reasonably clear. "Comets can brighten and even exceptionally
fragment, but I don't know of any evidence for such behaviour of
Halley in the past," he says.

Even if Halley was not involved, Abbott could still be right about
Earth passing through dust and suffering two or more large impacts.
Other groups are now taking another look at the ice cores. "With what
Dallas is publishing now, I'm going to go back to our ice samples and
see if we can find anything that replicates her results," says
Baillie.

In the meantime, our neighbour Mars may soon let us see first-hand
what happens when cometary debris hits a small planet. The Red Planet
is due to plough through the dust and gas surrounding Comet C/2013 A1
in October.

In the past few years, then, we have gone from no evidence of either a
volcanic eruption or any kind of impact around 536 to having
preliminary evidence of both. So what caused the global cold snap?
Dull will tell you it was a volcano, whereas Abbott is convinced it
was a comet. But it could be that they are both right.

The unusually severe cooling and its persistence may be best explained
by a double whammy. Vinther says the lack of any strong volcanic
signature in ice from 540 certainly makes such a volcano-and-comet
theory a possibility. It may seem unlikely that Earth experienced a
massive volcanic eruption and a close brush with a comet within the
same decade – but unlikely things do happen.

Read more: "Days of apocalypse: Civilisation-crushing disasters"

This article appeared in print under the headline "The year of darkness"

Colin Barras is a freelance writer based in Ann Arbor, Michigan

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