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Saturday, December 06, 2025

An erupting volcano may have kicked off a chain of events that led to the swift dance of the Black Plague across Europe in the 14th century, in a pandemic that killed tens of millions of people.

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Volcanic activity may have worsened the spread of the Black Death in medieval Europe. A study in Communications Earth & Environment suggests that climatic cooling and famine prompted Italian city-states to import grain from the Black Sea, potentially carrying the plague bacterium.

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-- Nature Portfolio (@natureportfolio.nature.com) Dec 5, 2025 at 3:55 PM

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More from the article ...

... New analyses of tree ring data, ice cores and historical accounts suggest that a powerful volcanic eruption somewhere in the tropics around 1345 sent clouds of ash around the world, darkening the skies over Europe, researchers report December 4 in Communications Earth & Environment.

The ash lingered through several growing seasons, turning Europe's climate colder and wetter -- and that, in turn, caused widespread crop failure across southern Europe and the Mediterranean region. Grain became scarce and prices skyrocketed. Famine gripped the region. ...

To ease the burden of starvation, in 1347 many of Italy's city-states, including Venice and Genoa, decided to import grain from the Mongol-controlled lands around the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov.

That lifesaving grain wasn't the only cargo the Italian trade ships brought back. A strain of the bacterium Yersinia pestis, which had originated in the steppes of central Asia around 1338, was by 1347 spreading through the wild rodent populations around the Black Sea.

And, the researchers note, the routes of the trade ships delivering grain from port to port around the Italian peninsula closely tracks to the region's first plague outbreaks in 1347. ...


Many more details in the article, which see.


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-04 06:56 PM | Reply

We live in a deterministic world, as much as we like to believe in the illusion of free will.

#2 | Posted by sentinel at 2025-12-05 09:14 AM | Reply

wild rodent populations around the Black Sea.

Slavs?

#3 | Posted by sit_goodboy at 2025-12-06 04:51 PM | Reply

@#2 ... We live in a deterministic world ...

Yup.

But the problem we seem to fail to recognize is that we don't always (or even, most of the time) determine the outcome.


#4 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-06 07:32 PM | Reply

White Nationalist Trumpers want to know what brought the Black and Brown Plagues to 'Murica?

#5 | Posted by Corky at 2025-12-06 09:28 PM | Reply

Yea, it does not just seem to be people who bring disease upon the shores of a country.

All the more reason for the occupants of the country to protect themselves.

#6 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-07 01:00 AM | Reply

Yeah, it does not seem to be just the people who bring disease into a country, but also other sources, e.g., imported goods.

All the more reason to be protected from such intrusions.


(looks like drudge.com, or its host, may be doing maintenance this evening. Long, so very looooooooong pauses when I try to post a comment. But it is Saturday night, the usual time for infrastructure maintenance ...)



#7 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-07 01:05 AM | Reply

Apologies for the double post.

When I posted the second one, the first one was not visible.

I'll chalk that up to the maintenance that may have been occurring.

#8 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-12-07 01:07 AM | Reply

Some interesting historian-as-detective work represented in the volcanic activity link.

Unfortunately, one of my favorite theories about the major contributing factor in bringing the Black Death to Europe in the 14 th century seems to have fallen more to the wayside: Mongols catapulting plague corpses into a Venetian trading center on the Crimean Peninsula. See Matt Field, "Catapulting corpses? A famous case of medieval biological warfare probably never happened" (thebulletin.org) and Hannah Barker, "Laying the Corpses to Rest: Grain, Embargoes, and Yersinia pestis in the Black Sea, 1346-48" (www.journals.uchicago.edu).

#9 | Posted by Doc_Sarvis at 2025-12-07 05:55 AM | Reply

Yea, not living in feces with perfume as a conceal-all.

#10 | Posted by fresno500 at 2025-12-07 09:57 AM | Reply

"A famous case of medieval biological warfare probably never happened"

Sounds like a whitewashing of history. Or maybe yellowashing?

#11 | Posted by sentinel at 2025-12-07 06:47 PM | Reply

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