The Dry Fog of 1783: Environmental Impact and Human Reaction to the Lakagígar Eruption

In the year 1783, an unusual fog covered the atmosphere over a large part of the Northern Hemisphere, persisting for a period of up to three months. In particular, the summer in Europe was characterized by the appearance of this phenomenon. Many contemporaries described it as a dry fog. The origin o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Eyþór Halldórsson
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.692.8987
http://skemman.is/stream/get/1946/17205/39864/1/MA-Thesis.pdf
Description
Summary:In the year 1783, an unusual fog covered the atmosphere over a large part of the Northern Hemisphere, persisting for a period of up to three months. In particular, the summer in Europe was characterized by the appearance of this phenomenon. Many contemporaries described it as a dry fog. The origin of this was the Lakagígar volcanic eruption of 1783-1784 in Iceland. This research focuses on the environmental impact of the eruption in Iceland and Europe, and analyzes how contemporaries reacted to its influence and what meaning they derived from it. The event is known to be one of the largest fissure eruptions in historical times. As a result of the volcanic activity, notorious amounts of volcanic gases were released into the atmosphere which formed the infamous fog. In Iceland, the volcanic pollution damaged crops and vegetation, and had a disastrous consequence for livelihood in the country. In that sense, the eruption was one of the primary causes of the Haze Famine of 1783-1785, where one-fifth of the Icelandic population perished. In Europe, the volcanic fog wielded an influence on communities that were oblivious of