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Debate Erupts Anew: Did Thera's Explosion Doom Minoan Crete?
International Herald Tribune ^ | 10-23-2003 | William J. Broad

Posted on 10/23/2003 2:47:33 PM PDT by blam

Debate erupts anew: Did Thera's explosion doom Minoan Crete?

William J. Broad
Thursday, October 23, 2003

For decades, scholars have debated whether the eruption of the Thera volcano in the Aegean more than 3,000 years ago brought about the mysterious collapse of Minoan civilization at the peak of its glory. The volcanic isle (whose remnants are known as Santorini) lay just 110 kilometers from Minoan Crete, so it seemed quite reasonable that its fury could have accounted for the fall of that celebrated people.

. This idea suffered a blow in 1987 when Danish scientists studying cores from the Greenland ice cap reported evidence that Thera exploded in 1645 B.C., some 150 years before the usually accepted date. That put so much time between the natural disaster and the Minoan decline that the linkage came to be widely doubted, seeming far-fetched at best.

. Now, scientists at Columbia University, the University of Hawaii and other institutions are renewing the proposed connection.

. New findings, they say, show that Thera's upheaval was far more violent than was previously calculated (many times larger than the 1883 Krakatoa eruption, which killed more than 36,000 people). They say the blast's cultural repercussions were equally large, rippling across the eastern Mediterranean for decades and perhaps centuries.

. "It had to have had a huge impact," said Floyd McCoy, a geologist at the University of Hawaii who has studied the eruption for decades and recently proposed that it was much more violent than had been previously thought.

. The scientists say Thera's outburst produced deadly waves and dense clouds of volcanic ash over a vast region, crippling ancient cities and fleets, setting off climate changes, ruining crops and sowing wide political unrest. For Minoan Crete, the scientists see direct and indirect consequences. McCoy discovered that towering waves from the eruption that hit Crete were up to 15 meters high, about 50 feet, smashing ports and fleets and severely damaging the maritime economy.

. Other scientists found indirect, long-term damage. Ash and global cooling from the volcanic pall caused wide crop failures in the eastern Mediterranean, they said, and the agricultural woes in turn set off political upheavals that undid Minoan friends and trade.

. "Imagine island states without links to the outside world," William Ryan, a geologist at Columbia's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, told a meeting of the American Geophysical Union.

. Scientists who link Thera to the Minoan decline say the evidence is still emerging and in some cases sketchy. Even so, they say it is already compelling enough to have convinced many archaeologists, geologists and historians that the repercussions probably amounted to a death blow for Minoan Crete.

. Rich and sensual, sophisticated and artistic, Minoan culture flourished in the Bronze Age between roughly 3,000 and 1,400 B.C., the first high civilization of Europe. It developed an early form of writing and used maritime skill to found colonies and a trade empire.

. The British archaeologist Arthur Evans called the civilization Minoan, after Minos, the legendary king. His unearthed palace was huge and intricate, and had clearly been weakened by upheavals, including fire and earthquakes. Nearby on the volcanic island of Thera, or Santorini, archaeologists dug up Minoan buildings, artifacts and a whole city, Akrotiri, buried under volcanic ash, like Pompeii. Some of its beautifully preserved frescoes depicted Egyptian motifs and animals, suggesting significant contact between the two peoples.

. In 1939, Spyridon Marinatos, a Greek archaeologist, proposed that the eruption wrecked Minoan culture on Thera and Crete. He envisioned the damage as done by associated earthquakes and tsunamis. While geologists found tsunamis credible, they doubted the destructive power of Thera's earthquakes, saying volcanic ones tend to be relatively mild. The debate simmered for decades.

. In the mid-1960's, scientists dredging up ooze from the bottom of the Mediterranean began to notice a thick layer of ash that they linked to Thera's eruption. They tracked it over thousands of square miles. McCoy of the University of Hawaii, then at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, took part in these discoveries, starting a lifelong interest in Thera. By the early 1980's, he was publishing papers on the ash distribution.

. Such clues helped geologists estimate the amount of material Thera spewed into the sky and the height of its eruption cloud - main factors in the Volcanic Explosivity Index. Its scale goes from zero to eight and is logarithmic, so each unit represents a tenfold increase in explosive power. Thera was given a VEI of 6.0, on a par with Krakatoa in 1883.

. The similarity to Krakatoa, which lies between Sumatra and Java, helped experts better envision Thera's wrath. Despite the power of Thera, the Danish scientists' evidence raised doubts about its links to the Minoan decline. Their date for Thera's explosion, 1645 B.C., based on frozen ash in Greenland, is some 150 years earlier than the usual date. Given that the Minoan fall was usually dated to 1450 B.C., the gap between cause and effect seemed too large.

. Another blow landed in 1989 when scholars on Crete found, above a Thera ash layer, a house that had been substantially rebuilt in the Minoan style. It suggested at least partial cultural survival.

. By 1996, experts like Jeremy Rutter, head of classics at Dartmouth, judged the chronological gap too extreme for any linkage. "No direct correlation can be established" between the volcano and the Minoan decline, he concluded.

. Amid doubts about the tie, scientists kept finding more evidence suggesting that Thera's eruption had been unusually violent and disruptive over wide areas. Scientific maps drawn in the 1960's and 1970's showed its ash as falling mostly over nearby waters and Aegean islands. By the 1990's, however, affected areas had mushroomed to include lands of the eastern Mediterranean from Anatolia to Egypt. Scientists found ash from Thera at the bottom of the Black Sea and Nile delta.

. Peter Kuniholm, an expert at Cornell on using tree rings to establish dates, found ancient trees in a burial mound in Anatolia, what now is in the Asian part of Turkey. For half a decade those trees had grown three times as fast as normal - apparently because Thera's volcanic pall turned hot, dry summers into seasons that were unusually cool and wet.

. More intrigued than ever, McCoy of the University of Hawaii two years ago stumbled on more evidence suggesting that Thera's ash fall had been unusually wide and heavy. During a field trip to Anafi, an island some 20 miles east of Thera, he found to his delight that the authorities had just cut fresh roads that exposed layers of Thera ash up to 10 feet thick - a surprising amount that distance from the eruption. And Greek colleagues showed him new seabed samples taken off the Greek mainland, suggesting that more ash blew westward than scientists had realized.

. Factoring in such evidence, McCoy calculated that Thera had a VEI of 7.0 - what geologists call colossal and exceedingly rare. In the past 10,000 years only one other volcano has exploded with that kind of gargantuan violence: Tambora, in Indonesia, in 1816, It produced an ash cloud in the upper atmosphere that reflected sunlight back into space and produced the year without a summer. The cold led to ruinous harvests, hunger and even famine in the United States, Europe and Russia.

. "I presented this evidence last summer at a meeting," McCoy recalled, "and the comment from the other volcanologists was, 'Hey, it was probably larger than Tambora.'"

. In scholarly articles, Jan Driessen, an archaeologist at the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium, and Colin MacDonald, an archaeologist at the British School in Athens, Greece, have argued that changes to Cretan architecture, storage, food production, artistic output and the distribution of riches imply major social dislocations, and perhaps civil war.

. By 1450 B.C., Mycenaean invaders from mainland Greece seized control of Crete, ending the Minoan era.

. Thera's destructiveness was probably the catalyst, Driessen and MacDonald wrote, "that culminated in Crete being absorbed to a greater or lesser extent into the Mycenaean, and therefore, the Greek world."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aegean; anew; aniakchak; calliste; crete; debate; doom; eberhardzangger; erupts; exodus; explosive; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; minoan; minoans; mycenaean; mycenaeans; santorini; thera; theras
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To: Straight Vermonter
Ping for home bookmarking.
41 posted on 10/23/2003 6:01:29 PM PDT by Straight Vermonter (We secretly switched ABC news with Al-Jazeera, lets see if these people can tell the difference.)
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To: blam
Looks like an education wasted.
42 posted on 10/23/2003 6:04:11 PM PDT by Bob J
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To: blam
Please add me to your list, if I'm not there already! Thanks!
43 posted on 10/23/2003 6:17:14 PM PDT by Bob J
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To: Poohbah
Blew most of the island out. Look at what's left today. Had a chance to vacation there years ago but didn't.


44 posted on 10/23/2003 6:35:10 PM PDT by tet68 (multiculturalism is an ideological academic fantasy maintained in obvious bad faith. M. Thompson)
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To: Utopia
Further, I was always taught that Thera was the origin of the Atlantis myth

OMG same here!

45 posted on 10/23/2003 6:37:37 PM PDT by MrsEmmaPeel
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To: Bob J
There is little that Plato wrote that can be taken at face value

What BS.

46 posted on 10/23/2003 6:41:13 PM PDT by Utopia
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To: Utopia
Un-un.
47 posted on 10/23/2003 7:29:25 PM PDT by Bob J
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To: Utopia
BTW - I thought that would be an appropriate response to your detailed counter argument.
48 posted on 10/23/2003 7:30:37 PM PDT by Bob J
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To: Bob J
As the keeper of blam's ping list, I will gladly add you. If you ever change your mind, just let me know.
49 posted on 10/23/2003 8:09:58 PM PDT by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: farmfriend
Thanks!
50 posted on 10/23/2003 8:11:30 PM PDT by Bob J
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To: Bob J
come by chat sometime when you get chance. I have been advertising and it is getting results.
51 posted on 10/23/2003 8:24:38 PM PDT by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: blam
I've spend several holidays on absolutely beautiful Thera as it is called by the locals (not Santorini) and I can attest to the fact that whatever happened was monumental...the crater is huge and the ash from that long ago earthquake still covers many of the beaches there.

Vegetables grown on Thera are delectable - the best tomatoes I have ever tasted. I guess it must be the volcanic soil.

52 posted on 10/23/2003 8:27:46 PM PDT by eleni121
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To: eleni121
In the 1300's Thera was owned by a Jewish guy named Joseph Nazi. No kidding.
53 posted on 10/23/2003 8:38:27 PM PDT by blam
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To: farmfriend
Cool! Thanks!
54 posted on 10/23/2003 9:20:29 PM PDT by Bob J
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To: blam
Worldwide tree rings ...

That would a really big tree, Yggdrasil?

55 posted on 10/23/2003 9:22:23 PM PDT by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: blam
(another) BUMP for later read
56 posted on 10/23/2003 11:07:31 PM PDT by KayEyeDoubleDee (const tag& constTagPassedByReference)
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To: Bob J
If the plume did reach at least 30 miles (or higher, who knows?) it could have been seen by the Hebrews

Keep in mind, from the Nile delta (which was probably farther south than it is now), only the part of the plume which was 30 miles high or higher would have been visible above the horizon. It was probably more 'blip' than plume.

Just roughly, and doing the math in my head, a plume sixty miles high would only have stuck up 3 or 4 degrees.

57 posted on 10/24/2003 2:03:24 AM PDT by Grut
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To: Grut
If the prevailing wind was blowing towards Egypt the plume needn't have been so high to be visible.

Had it been the high altitude winds the bulk of the ash wouldn't be carried along, so there wouldn't be as heavy an ash fall, and the plume would be illuminated by the sun well after local sunset, and before local sunrise.

Anyone know the typical jet stream patterns over the Med?
58 posted on 10/24/2003 6:52:43 AM PDT by null and void
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To: Bob J
The Egyptian made several interesting voyages, not the least of which was to the land of Punt. They brought back apes, ivory, and, most valuable, frankincense trees. I don't know what the routes were, but they were pretty long voyages.
59 posted on 10/24/2003 10:54:36 AM PDT by Little Ray (When in trouble, when in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout!)
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To: Grut
The equation is: square root of the altitude in feet times 1.23 equals the distance to the horizon in nautical miles.

???

Would that be (SQRT (a))* 1.23?
Or SQRT(a*1.23)?

For an eye height of 6 feet those return answers of 3.01 nm and 2.72 nm respectively, neither of which looks right.

60 posted on 10/24/2003 11:13:10 AM PDT by Publius6961 (40% of Californians are as dumb as a sack of rocks.)
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