Volcanic eruptions and viking society

15.09.2023

How did volcanic eruptions and their climate impact shape the early history and society of Scandinavia?

The period 500-1250 Common Era (CE) is characterized by societal unrest, Viking expansion, emerging kingship - and large volcanic eruptions evidenced by geochemical markers in natural archives. The climate variations in Europe, especially in Scandinavia during this period, are however poorly resolved even on a timescale of centuries.

A small vikng ship at shore in a bay.

Moreover, available dating of archaeological findings from that time has never been interpreted within a framework of climatic and environmental change. Within the VIKINGS project, researchers at the Department of Geosciences at the University of Oslo aim to understand how volcanic eruptions and climate change shaped the early history of Europe.

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Figures displaying graphs and temperature maps based on historical data.
a) Temperature and precipitation anomaly maps of Scandinavia from one realization (no. 2) of the climate model with markers for archaeological, historical, and pollen proxy data supporting this model simulation. (b) Summed probability distribution of 14C dates (Loftsgarden and Solheim, in press) from archaeological sites in southeastern Norway. (Fig. 9 van Dijk et al 2023)

During the last 8,000 years, there have been extremely cold periods that, according to the climate model simulations, can only be explained by a series of large explosive volcanic eruptions. Volcanic-induced multi-centennial cold periods occurred once or twice per millennium throughout this Holocene period (van Dijk, 2022).
The fourth coldest of these long-lasting cold periods took place during the mid-6th century. The VIKINGS researchers conducted targeted Earth System Climate model runs for the period 520 CE to 660 CE to investigate if volcanic eruptions, in particular the volcanic double event in 536 CE and 540 CE, resulted in cooling lasting from decades to centuries across Scandinavia and Europe.

The graph shows (a) Temperature and precipitation anomaly maps of Scandinavia from one realisation (no. 2) of the climate model with markers for archaeological, historical, and pollen proxy data supporting this model simulation.

(b) Summed probability distribution of 14C dates (Loftsgarden and Solheim, in press) from archaeological sites in southeastern Norway. (Fig. 9 van Dijk et al 2023)

"Our multi-disciplinary research would not be possible without the national high-performance computer resources provided by Sigma2.

Our current annual resources requirements approach 3 million CPU hours and several hundred terabytes of storage."

Kirstin Krüger, Professor and Project Leader

Revisiting the mythological Fimbulwinter

The so-called Late Antiquity Little Ice Age lasted from the mid-6th to the 7th century. The VIKINGS project’s model results reveal that there is a pronounced cooling over Scandinavia lasting approximately 20 years in the model experiments with the new and improved volcanic forcing data set from the 6th assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The pronounced surface climate cooling over Scandinavia may have led to the Norse mythology of the “Fimbulwinter” (Gundersen, 2022).

These climate model simulations combined with a growing-degree-day model and local pollen records reveal that this cooling had a severe impact on societies in Southern Norway for up to 20 years (van Dijk et al 2022). The mountainous inland study area as well as the west coast of Norway experienced a reduction in agricultural activity and farm abandonment, whereas in the Oslo fjord area (Raknehaugen mound) agriculture and society were hardly affected (van Dijk et al 2023).