The Little Ice Age
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.0384
For more than 500 years, until the middle of the 19th century, much of the North Temperate Zone experienced the Little Ice Age (LIA)—the most extended period of anomalously cold summers since the end of the last real ice age 10 000 years ago. The LIA caused numerous famines and wiped out the Norse settlements in southern Greenland. Its cause and multicentury persistence have long been puzzling. Variations in solar irradiation and volcanic eruptions have been invoked as causes, but the one seems too weak and the other too ephemeral. Major volcanic eruptions can create worldwide sulfate aerosols that reflect enough solar radiation to create “volcanic winters.” Such aerosols, however, last only a few years. But now a team at the University of Colorado