Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/14027
Authors: Smith, Victoria C.* 
Costa, Antonio* 
Aguirre-Diaz, Gerardo* 
Pedrazzi, Dario* 
Scifo, Andrea* 
Plunkett, Gill* 
Poret, Matthieu* 
Tournigand, Pierre-Yves* 
Miles, Dan* 
Dee, Michael W* 
McConnell, Joseph* 
Sunye Puchol, Ivan* 
Dávila Harris, Pablo* 
Sigl, Michael* 
Pilcher, Jonathan R* 
Chellman, Nathan* 
Gutierrez, Eduardo* 
Title: The magnitude and impact of the 431 CE Tierra Blanca Joven eruption of Ilopango, El Salvador
Journal: Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 
Series/Report no.: 42/117 (2020)
Publisher: National Academy of Sciences
Issue Date: 2020
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2003008117
Keywords: Maya; eruption dispersal; large volcanic eruptions; radiocarbon; sulfate
Abstract: The Tierra Blanca Joven (TBJ) eruption from Ilopango volcano deposited thick ash over much of El Salvador when it was inhabited by the Maya, and rendered all areas within at least 80 km of the volcano uninhabitable for years to decades after the eruption. Nonetheless, the more widespread environmental and climatic impacts of this large eruption are not well known because the eruption magnitude and date are not well constrained. In this multifaceted study we have resolved the date of the eruption to 431 ± 2 CE by identifying the ash layer in a well-dated, high-resolution Greenland ice-core record that is >7,000 km from Ilopango; and calculated that between 37 and 82 km3 of magma was dispersed from an eruption coignimbrite column that rose to ∼45 km by modeling the deposit thickness using state-of-the-art tephra dispersal methods. Sulfate records from an array of ice cores suggest stratospheric injection of 14 ± 2 Tg S associated with the TBJ eruption, exceeding those of the historic eruption of Pinatubo in 1991. Based on these estimates it is likely that the TBJ eruption produced a cooling of around 0.5 °C for a few years after the eruption. The modeled dispersal and higher sulfate concentrations recorded in Antarctic ice cores imply that the cooling would have been more pronounced in the Southern Hemisphere. The new date confirms the eruption occurred within the Early Classic phase when Maya expanded across Central America.
Appears in Collections:Article published / in press

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat Existing users please Login
smicos2020.pdfrestricted file1.25 MBAdobe PDF
Smith_2020_PNAS_accepted.pdf13.19 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
Show full item record

WEB OF SCIENCETM
Citations

1
checked on Feb 4, 2021

Page view(s)

101
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Download(s)

4
checked on Apr 24, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric