Articles | Volume 17, issue 2
https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-17-565-2021
https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-17-565-2021
Research article
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04 Mar 2021
Research article | Highlight paper |  | 04 Mar 2021

Cryptotephra from the Icelandic Veiðivötn 1477 CE eruption in a Greenland ice core: confirming the dating of volcanic events in the 1450s CE and assessing the eruption's climatic impact

Peter M. Abbott, Gill Plunkett, Christophe Corona, Nathan J. Chellman, Joseph R. McConnell, John R. Pilcher, Markus Stoffel, and Michael Sigl
Abstract

Volcanic eruptions are a key source of climatic variability, and reconstructing their past impact can improve our understanding of the operation of the climate system and increase the accuracy of future climate projections. Two annually resolved and independently dated palaeoarchives – tree rings and polar ice cores – can be used in tandem to assess the timing, strength and climatic impact of volcanic eruptions over the past  2500 years. The quantification of post-volcanic climate responses, however, has at times been hampered by differences between simulated and observed temperature responses that raised questions regarding the robustness of the chronologies of both archives. While many chronological mismatches have been resolved, the precise timing and climatic impact of two major sulfate-emitting volcanic eruptions during the 1450s CE, including the largest atmospheric sulfate-loading event in the last 700 years, have not been constrained. Here we explore this issue through a combination of tephrochronological evidence and high-resolution ice-core chemistry measurements from a Greenland ice core, the TUNU2013 record.

We identify tephra from the historically dated 1477 CE eruption of the Icelandic Veiðivötn–Bárðarbunga volcanic system in direct association with a notable sulfate peak in TUNU2013 attributed to this event, confirming that this peak can be used as a reliable and precise time marker. Using seasonal cycles in several chemical elements and 1477 CE as a fixed chronological point shows that ages of 1453 CE and 1458 CE can be attributed, with high precision, to the start of two other notable sulfate peaks. This confirms the accuracy of a recent Greenland ice-core chronology over the middle to late 15th century and corroborates the findings of recent volcanic reconstructions from Greenland and Antarctica. Overall, this implies that large-scale Northern Hemisphere climatic cooling affecting tree-ring growth in 1453 CE was caused by a Northern Hemisphere volcanic eruption in 1452 or early 1453 CE, and then a Southern Hemisphere eruption, previously assumed to have triggered the cooling, occurred later in 1457 or 1458 CE.

The direct attribution of the 1477 CE sulfate peak to the eruption of Veiðivötn, one of the most explosive from Iceland in the last 1200 years, also provides the opportunity to assess the eruption's climatic impact. A tree-ring-based reconstruction of Northern Hemisphere summer temperatures shows a cooling in the aftermath of the eruption of 0.35 C relative to a 1961–1990 CE reference period and 0.1 C relative to the 30-year period around the event, as well as a relatively weak and spatially incoherent climatic response in comparison to the less explosive but longer-lasting Icelandic Eldgjá 939 CE and Laki 1783 CE eruptions. In addition, the Veiðivötn 1477 CE eruption occurred around the inception of the Little Ice Age and could be used as a chronostratigraphic marker to constrain the phasing and spatial variability of climate changes over this transition if it can be traced in more regional palaeoclimatic archives.

Dates
1 Introduction

1.1 Assessing the timing, strength and climatic impact of volcanic eruptions

Volcanic eruptions are a key source of natural climatic variability, with the sulfate aerosols they emit into the stratosphere shielding the Earth from solar radiation and causing short-term cooling from a local to global scale (Robock, 2000; Sigl et al., 2015). Reconstructing climatic variability caused by past volcanic forcing improves understanding of responses, feedbacks and internal variability in the climate system that can help increase the accuracy of future climate predictions (Schurer et al., 2013; Bethke et al., 2017). Two key proxies provide evidence for these reconstructions: tree rings, which record terrestrial climatic changes that could be related to volcanic eruptions, and polar ice cores, which record the atmospheric burden of sulfate aerosols produced by past volcanic eruptions. Both archives have independent annually resolved chronologies that can be used to determine the timing of past volcanic events and their climatic impact. However, the quantification of post-volcanic climate responses has been hampered by differences in simulated and reconstructed temperature changes as well as potential mismatches in timing between the archives, which raised questions about the robustness of both tree-ring and ice-core chronologies (e.g. Baillie, 2008; Anchukaitis et al., 2012; Esper et al., 2013; Büntgen et al., 2014). Age uncertainties can arise from cumulative age uncertainties in the annual layer interpretation of ice cores, the brevity of the growth phase of tree rings during the Northern Hemisphere summer, and the time lag between sulfur emissions at a volcanic source and subsequent deposition of sulfuric aerosols on polar ice sheets, which can range from a few weeks up to a year depending on location and other eruption source parameters (e.g. Marshall et al., 2019). While the majority of the potential chronological mismatches have been resolved using new ice-core chronologies and long-term hemispheric-wide tree-ring-based climate reconstructions (Sigl et al., 2015; Stoffel et al., 2015; Wilson et al., 2016), several enigmas remain. The most notable of these unsolved questions is the apparent discrepancy between the timing of two major sulfur-emitting volcanic eruptions, including the largest sulfate-loading event in the last 700 years, and large-scale climatic cooling observed during the 1450s CE (Esper et al., 2017). This time period also aligns with the inception of the “Little Ice Age” (LIA; Grove, 2012) in the Northern Hemisphere (e.g. Owens et al., 2017; Büntgen et al., 2020).

The large sulfate-loading eruption during the 1450s CE has most commonly been attributed to the formation of the submarine Kuwae caldera offshore of Vanuatu in the South Pacific. This attribution is based on radiocarbon dating of charcoal that places the event, first described in oral histories of local islands (see Ballard, 2020), in the mid-15th century (Monzier et al., 1994; Robin et al., 1994) and petrological evidence that it was a sulfur-rich eruption (Witter and Self, 2007). This attribution has become commonly accepted within the literature despite a lack of confirmatory evidence. In recent studies, however, this source has been challenged or not attributed to the event (e.g. Németh et al., 2007; Esper et al., 2017; Toohey and Sigl, 2017; Hartman et al., 2019).

1.2 Timing of volcanic eruptions in the 1450s CE

Through the study of bristlecone pines in the western USA, LaMarche and Hirschboeck (1984) identified a series of frost rings, including a widespread frost ring in 1453 CE, that they attributed to large volcanic eruptions. Filion et al. (1986) and Delwaide et al. (1991) also reported light rings related to 1453 CE in more than 25 % of subfossil black spruce trees sampled in subarctic Quebec. Briffa et al. (1998) subsequently identified a distinct cooling event in 1453 CE, recorded at multiple sites within their circum-northern hemispheric network of tree-ring chronologies from the northern boreal forest, while Salzer and Hughes (2007) identified evidence for anomalous tree-ring growth in the early and late 1450s CE in western USA bristlecone pines. More recently, warm-season temperature reconstructions from Northern Hemisphere tree-ring networks have revealed spatially coherent and exceptional cooling in 1453 CE, with cooling ranging spatially between 0.4 and 6.9 C, marking the onset of a 15-year cold period (Stoffel et al., 2015; Esper et al., 2017; Guillet et al., 2017).

https://cp.copernicus.org/articles/17/565/2021/cp-17-565-2021-f01

Figure 1Bipolar comparison of sub-annual-resolution ice-core non-sea-salt sulfur concentrations between 1440 and 1490 CE. Greenland data from the NEEM-2011-S1 ice core (Sigl et al., 2013), the TUNU2013 ice core (Sigl et al., 2015) and the North Greenland Ice Core Project (NGRIP) ice core (Plummer et al., 2012), all plotted using the annually counted NS-2011 chronology (Sigl et al., 2015). Antarctic data are from the annually counted West Antarctic Ice Sheet Divide (WDC) ice core on the WD2014 age scale (Sigl et al., 2016).

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Various glaciochemical studies on Antarctic ice cores have provided evidence for a large volcanic event around 1450 CE (e.g. Zanolini et al., 1985; Legrand and Kirchner, 1990; Moore et al., 1991). Delmas et al. (1992) suggested that this so-called “1450 event” was derived from a Southern Hemisphere eruption based on a limited coeval signal in Greenland (Hammer et al., 1980) and associated it with the climate cooling in the tree-ring records to attribute it an age of 1452 CE. Langway et al. (1995) subsequently identified a bipolar volcanic event to which they attributed an age of 1459 CE, and Zielinski (1995) attributed this to the large mid-15th century volcanic event. Later, in their compilation of 33 ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica, Gao et al. (2006) suggested that the 1459 CE signal was from an eruption local to Greenland and concluded that the major Southern Hemisphere volcanic eruption occurred in late 1452 CE or early 1453 CE. However, this study overlooked that many of the ice-core chronologies from Antarctica were fixed to the tree-ring minima of 1453 CE following Briffa et al. (1998). Within the recent high-resolution ice-core-based independent volcanic reconstructions of Plummer et al. (2012) and Sigl et al. (2013, 2014, 2015) from both Greenland and Antarctica, two distinct sulfate peaks can be observed in the 1450s CE (Fig. 1). To provide a consistent terminology these unknown volcanic eruptions have been labelled after the year in which the increase in volcanic sulfate is first detectable in the records (i.e. 1453 CE and 1458 CE). The actual eruption date is either in the same year or the previous year, due to the potential time delay of volcanic sulfate deposition on the ice-core sites (e.g. Marshall et al., 2019). The bipolar expression of these sulfate signals indicates that a comparatively smaller volcanic eruption, with a sulfate burden similar to that following Krakatau in 1883 CE, occurred in the low latitudes in 1452 or early 1453 CE and was followed by a massive low-latitude event in 1458 CE (Fig. 1; Sigl et al., 2013). Sulfur isotope analysis of the two peaks in ice cores from Greenland and of the 1458 CE peak in Antarctica shows that both of these eruptions injected sulfur gases into the stratosphere and thus had the potential to impact global climate (Baroni et al., 2008; Cole-Dai et al., 2013; Gautier et al., 2019).

Sigl et al. (2013) argued that the first eruption in 1453 CE caused the major climatic changes recorded in the tree-ring archives, that 1458 CE is the correct age for the large sulfate peak in the mid-1450s CE recorded at both poles and that this event contributed to the decadal persistency of the cooling but triggered less distinct climatic changes that were only recorded in some tree-ring records (e.g. Salzer and Hughes, 2007). Subsequently, based on the new ages from two ice cores from Antarctica and observations from their tree-ring network, Esper et al. (2017) proposed two scenarios for the larger of the two volcanic events in the 1450s CE: either the original age of 1452 CE proposed by Delmas et al. (1992) for ice cores in Antarctica was correct and the cooling observed in the tree-ring records in 1453 CE was caused by this event, or it occurred in 1458 CE and did not cause large-scale cooling in the Northern Hemisphere extratropics. While omitting a discussion of the second major event in the 1450s CE, Esper et al. (2017) suggested that the first scenario is more likely and contended that the dendroclimatological evidence Sigl et al. (2013) used to support their dating to 1458 CE provides insufficient support for the new age for the larger sulfate-loading eruption. Here we further explore this debate and the scenarios proposed by Sigl et al. (2013) and Esper et al. (2017) by testing the accuracy of the recent ice-core chronologies using a tephra horizon from a historically dated Icelandic eruption.

1.3 Determining the source of volcanic eruptions in ice cores

While comparisons of the relative peak sulfate concentrations between ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica can be used to assess if volcanic events occurred in the Southern or Northern Hemisphere extratropics or in the tropics (Sigl et al., 2015; see Sect. 5.1), sulfate records alone cannot pinpoint the exact source of an eruption. Particles of volcanic ash (glass tephra shards) may be preserved in ice cores following eruptions in association with sulfate peaks, and their chemical composition is a fingerprint of their volcanic source. Through geochemical analysis of individual glass shards and comparisons to characterisations of proximal deposits it is often possible to determine the volcanic source of these ice-core tephra horizons (Abbott and Davies, 2012). The fine-grained nature, low concentration of particles and lack of visible expression (i.e. cryptotephras) for many of these deposits make their identification and subsequent geochemical analysis challenging. However, a range of methods for the preparation and analysis of ice-core tephra samples has been developed and successfully applied to ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica (e.g. Dunbar et al., 2003; Davies et al., 2010a; Dunbar and Kurbatov, 2011; Coulter et al., 2012; Bourne et al., 2015, 2016; Iverson et al., 2017; Cook et al., 2018; Narcisi et al., 2019).

Identifying tephra in ice cores in direct association with sulfate peaks allows the volcanic source of those emissions to be determined with high certainty; however, it has been shown that tephra shards are not found in direct association with all sulfate peaks (e.g. Abbott et al., 2012; Coulter et al., 2012; Bourne et al., 2015). Despite this, any tephra-based source attributions are useful, especially for sulfate peaks assumed to link to known historical eruptions that provide keystone time markers for constructing, testing and synchronising ice-core chronologies (e.g. Öræfajökull 1362 CE – Palais et al., 1991; Laki 1783 CE – Fiacco et al., 1994; Katmai 1912 CE – Coulter et al., 2012). In addition, if such events occur in close association with other sulfate peaks of interest the dating control for all the events will be improved as the relative age differences between closely spaced peaks are more precise than absolute age estimates: so-called differential dating (Andersen et al., 2006). This approach has been used to resolve the timing, strength and climatic impacts of past volcanic events; for example, the identification of tephra in a Greenland ice core from the “Millennium Eruption” of Changbaishan (China and North Korea) (Sun et al., 2014) has helped to resolve these factors for that event and the earlier Icelandic Eldgjá eruption (Oppenheimer et al., 2017, 2018).

Here we explore whether tephra from the historically dated 1477 CE eruption of Veiðivötn–Bárðarbunga, Iceland, with which an obvious sulfate peak is commonly correlated and used as an age marker in Greenland ice-core chronologies (Fig. 1; Sigl et al., 2013, 2015), can be identified in a Greenland ice core. Direct attribution of this peak to the historical event will test and help improve ice-core dating around this marker and contribute to the debate regarding the strength and climatic impact of volcanic eruptions during the 1450s CE. In addition, attribution of the sulfate peak to the 1477 CE Icelandic eruption would provide the opportunity to explore the climatic impact of sulfate emitted during this eruption. The 1477 CE eruption was a notable event as it is considered to be one of the most explosive Icelandic eruptions during historical times, with a volcano explosivity index (VEI; Newhall and Self, 1982) of 6.

2 Veiðivötn 1477 CE

Iceland is the primary source of tephra horizons identified in the Greenland ice cores (e.g. Abbott and Davies, 2012; Bourne et al., 2015). As such, due to the high activity of many Icelandic volcanoes during the historical period (i.e. since the settlement of Iceland in the late 9th century CE), when many eruptions can be precisely dated to the year, month, day and even hour using documentary records, Icelandic tephra horizons can provide key markers to test ice-core chronologies for the last  1100 years (Larsen et al., 2014). The Veiðivötn–Bárðarbunga volcanic system was one of the most active during the historical period based on the frequency of eruptions, with notable eruptions recorded in 1797 CE, 1717 CE, 1500 CE, 1477 CE,  1410 CE and  1159 CE (Larsen et al., 1998, 2014). Of these events the large-volume phreatoplinian eruption in 1477 CE was the most explosive and widespread, erupting over 10 km3 of basaltic tephra from a 60–65 km long fissure along the Veiðivötn lake basin, and ash from the early stages of the eruption, which lasted for at least 12 h, was distributed over about half of Iceland to the E, NE and N of the fissure (Larsen, 2005; Larsen et al., 2014; Fig. 2b). The pattern of dispersal of highly fragmented lithic material from this highly explosive eruption suggests an eruption column during the main phase of > 18 km height (Larsen, 2005) and the release of sulfuric gases from the sulfur-rich basaltic magma into the stratosphere. Tephra from the 1477 CE eruption has been identified at many proximal and medial sites in Iceland as a visible horizon, including in soil sections, lake sediment cores and in offshore marine cores (Fig. 2b). Two distal cryptotephra occurrences have been identified thus far (Fig. 2a), one in An Loch Mór, western Ireland (MOR-T1; Chambers et al., 2004), and another in Lake Getvaltjärnen, Sweden (Davies et al., 2007). These correlations are underpinned by major element analysis of individual glass shards but are supported by stratigraphic and geochronological evidence due to geochemical similarities between the basaltic products of the Veiðivötn volcanic system (see Sect. 5.3).

https://cp.copernicus.org/articles/17/565/2021/cp-17-565-2021-f02

Figure 2(a) Location map of the TUNU2013 ice-core drilling site and sites outside Iceland containing tephra attributed to the Veiðivötn 1477 CE eruption. (b) Location map of Icelandic sites containing tephra from the Veiðivötn 1477 CE eruption, from which geochemical characterisations were used in this study, the location of the historical report of the eruption and the 60–65 km long fissure active during the 1477 CE eruption. The green shaded area covers the 0.5 cm isopach of the Veiðivötn 1477 CE eruption. Adapted from Larsen et al. (2014).

Early descriptions of deposits from this eruption proximal to Veiðivötn did not ascribe a historical date to the event as it was thought to have not been mentioned in written sources; however, it was assigned an age of 1480 CE ± 11 years based on soil accumulation rates between dated tephra layers (Larsen, 1984). Subsequently, on the basis of geochemical evidence and field mapping, a correlation was found between the Veiðivötn deposits and tephra layer “a”, a widespread historically dated deposit previously thought to have originated from the Kverkfjöll volcanic system (Thórarinsson, 1958; Benjamínsson, 1981; Larsen et al., 2013). Thórarinsson (1958) associated tephra layer “a” with an observed tephra-fall in the Eyjafjörður area, northern Iceland (Fig. 1), which was subsequently reported in a votive letter written on 11 March 1477 CE. Based on this a historical date of early 1477 CE, most likely February, can be ascribed to the Veiðivötn–Bárðarbunga eruption, and it is henceforth referred to as V1477 (Guðrún Larsen, personal communication, 2020).

3 Materials and methods

3.1 TUNU2013 ice-core chemistry and chronology

The 213 m long TUNU2013 ice core was retrieved from northeastern Greenland during summer 2013 (78.04 N, 33.88 W; Fig. 2a) and covers the period between 280 CE and 2013 CE. Ice-core sections were measured at the Desert Research Institute (DRI) using a continuous melter analysis system that includes two Element2 (Thermo Scientific) high-resolution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometers operating in parallel to provide directly co-registered measurements of a broad range of  35 elements, including sulfur, calcium and sodium (McConnell et al., 2002; Sigl et al., 2015; Maselli et al., 2017). There are several sources of sulfur in ice-core records; therefore, the sea salt component was removed to isolate the non-sea-salt (nssS) concentrations (Sigl et al., 2013). In addition to the elemental measurements, co-registered measurements of insoluble particle concentrations, in the size ranges of 2.6–4.5 and 4.5–9.5 µm diameter, were made using an inline Abakus® laser-based particle detector (Ruth et al., 2003). The nssS and fine particle concentrations were used to guide the tephra sampling towards depths with coeval peaks in both parameters. While the particle measurements are not a direct proxy or solely controlled by the presence of tephra shards, this approach has successfully been used to identify tephra horizons in both Greenland and Antarctic ice cores (e.g. Jensen et al., 2014; Dunbar et al., 2017; McConnell et al., 2017, 2020; Plunkett et al., 2020; Smith et al., 2020).

https://cp.copernicus.org/articles/17/565/2021/cp-17-565-2021-f03

Figure 3(a) Annual-resolution sulfur and particle concentration data from TUNU2013 between 1450 and 1500 CE. Data plotted using the NS1-2011 chronology. (b) Sub-annual-resolution sulfur and particle concentration data from TUNU2013 between 1475 and 1480 CE. Data plotted using the NS1-2011 chronology. Red bars denote depth intervals of tephra sampling. Tephra samples: (i) QUB-1965 = 78.515–78.655 m, (ii) QUB-1964 = 78.435–78.515 m, (iii) QUB-1963 = 78.395–78.435 m, (iv) QUB-1962 = 78.315–78.395 m. (c) Example of a brown, platy glass tephra shard identified in the TUNU2013 78.655 m deposit.

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The data from TUNU2013 were synchronised to the annually counted and seasonally resolved NS1-2011 chronology of Sigl et al. (2015) using a series of volcanic markers as tie points, including the sulfate peak thought to relate to V1477. The period covering 1450–1500 CE could be identified between  75.79 and 82.20 m, and clear peaks in sulfate thought to have started in 1453 CE, 1458 CE and 1477 CE were observed (Fig. 3a). During this time period the measurement resolution is  1 cm and annual layers are  12 cm thick; therefore, the data have a sub-annual, nominally monthly, resolution with a seasonal precision (i.e.  2 months) due to variations in snowfall throughout the year. Annual layers were also counted in TUNU2013 between 1445 and 1485 CE using concentration data for elements that show clear seasonal cycles, namely calcium and sodium, whose variations are driven by continental dust and oceanic sea spray deposition, respectively, and the nssS / Na ratio was used to define the annual layer boundary (Sigl et al., 2013; Maselli et al., 2017; Fig. 5). This annual layer count permits the full assessment of the ages of the two sulfate peaks in the 1450s CE in TUNU2013 using differential dating if the V1477 tephra is identified.

3.2 Cryptotephra analysis

The 1477 CE sulfate peak in TUNU2013 was accompanied by a coeval peak in particle concentration; thus, archived ice from the interval between 78.515 and 78.655 m was sampled directly for tephra analysis to determine if it related to the V1477 eruption (sample code QUB-1965; Fig. 3b). Direct ice samples (QUB-1964, QUB-1963 and QUB-1962) were also taken for tephra analysis across a later peak in particle concentrations, which according to the NS1-2011 chronology is centred around late 1478 CE to early 1479 CE and precedes a minor sulfate peak in middle to late 1479 CE (Fig. 3b).

The direct ice samples were transferred to individual Nalgene bottles and melted at room temperature; the meltwater was then centrifuged to concentrate any particulate material present. The concentrated meltwater was evaporated onto frosted 28 × 48 mm microprobe slides and covered with Buehler EpoxyCure 2 resin. The presence of glass tephra shards was assessed at 100–400× magnification using a polarising light microscope, and a significant concentration of shards was identified in QUB-1965. To section the glass shards and create a flat surface for geochemical analysis the epoxy mount was ground using 12 µm alumina powder and then polished using 6, 3 and 1 µm diamond paste. The surface of the resin and exposed shards was then carbon-coated prior to the concentrations of 11 major and minor elements within individual glass shards being analysed using a JEOL FEGSEM 6500F at Queen's University Belfast (QUB), which integrates wavelength and energy-dispersive spectrometry analysis (WDS and EDS, respectively; Coulter et al., 2010). Operating conditions followed Coulter et al. (2010) with the addition of Cl and P measured using EDS and WDS, respectively. Further details on the operating conditions are provided in Table S3 in the Supplement. Glass from the rhyolitic Lipari obsidian and the basaltic Laki 1783 CE tephra was analysed as secondary standards during the analytical period and compared to recommended values from Kuehn et al. (2011). A sample of V1477 tephra from Suðurárbotnar, northern Iceland (G. Guðrún Larsen, personal communication, 2020), was analysed as a QUB Veiðivötn internal standard. The raw sample and secondary standard analyses are provided in the Supplement (Tables S1 and S2).

Geochemical analyses from several occurrences of the V1477 tephra were collated for data analysis (Fig. 2; Table S4). To facilitate graphical and statistical comparisons between all datasets the geochemical data were normalised to an anhydrous basis (i.e. 100 % total oxides) using eight elements consistently analysed in all studies. As such, the minor elements MnO, P2O5 and Cl were not included, and their concentrations were deducted from the analytical totals prior to normalisation (see Table S4). Statistical comparisons were made between tephra occurrences using the statistical distance (D2) test described in Perkins et al. (1995, 1998) and the similarity coefficient (SC) function of Borchardt et al. (1972) (Tables S5 and S6).

3.3 Tree-ring-based reconstructions of cooling induced by Icelandic eruptions

3.3.1 Impact of volcanic eruptions on Northern Hemisphere summer temperatures

In addition to the ice-core and tephra analysis, we quantified the cooling induced by the V1477 eruption using the NVOLC v2 dataset of Guillet et al. (2020) and compared it to other major Icelandic eruptions of the Common Era. The NVOLC v2 dataset includes 13 tree-ring width (TRW) and 12 maximum latewood density (MXD) chronologies spread across the Northern Hemisphere (NH; for further details see Stoffel et al., 2015, and Guillet et al., 2017). All chronologies in NVOLC v2 have either been calibrated against regional instrumental climate data and transferred into temperature units or have been interpreted by the original authors as a temperature proxy. Here, a principal component regression (PCR) approach was chosen to transfer TRW and MXD data into NH summer (or JJA for June–July–August) temperature units, expressed as anomalies with respect to the 1961–1990 reference period. A reduced space signal of the proxy records was then extracted using principal component analysis (PCA), resulting in a set of principal component (PC) scores and PC loading patterns. The first n PCs with eigenvalues > 1 were retained as predictors to develop a multiple linear regression model. A multiple cross-validation using random calibration sets (bootstrapping) was applied to the PCR to estimate the skill of the reconstruction and confidence intervals around the reconstructed anomalies. Because each chronology had different lengths, an iterative nesting method was used to develop the temperature reconstruction. This procedure entails the subsetting of the original dataset into complete data matrices without missing values, so-called nests.

In NVOLC v2, 23 nests have been adjusted to the common period of all series. The earliest spans the period 500–551 CE and is composed of six chronologies. The most replicated nest (1230–1972 CE) included 25 chronologies. The nested PCR was computed schematically following a three-step procedure. In each nest, the number of predictor variables was first reduced using a principal component analysis; secondly, the PCs with eigenvalues > 1 were retained as independent variables within ordinary least-square (OLS) multiple regression models, while a mean NH JJA temperature series, obtained from the Berkeley Earth Surface Temperature (BEST) dataset over the period 1805–1972 CE, was used as a dependent variable. The robustness of each model was tested based on a traditional split calibration–verification procedure bootstrapped 1000 times, and the final reconstruction of each nest was computed as the median of the 1000 realisations given with their 95 % confidence interval. The skill of each reconstruction has been evaluated based on the coefficient of determination (r2 for the calibration and R2 for the verification periods), reduction of error (RE) and coefficient of efficiency (CoE) statistics. The final reconstruction (500–2000 CE) was achieved by splicing all the nested time series after the mean and variance of each nested reconstruction segment had been adjusted to the best replicated nest (1230–1972 CE). Finally, reconstructed temperature anomalies are presented as deviations from the 30-year mean climatology around the year of the volcanic eruption. For example, for V1477, a background was calculated by averaging the windows 1462–1476 CE and 1478–1493 CE, and then an anomaly was created by subtracting this background from the 1477 CE reconstructed temperature.

3.3.2 Regional variability of Northern Hemisphere summer cooling

In order to characterise regional-scale climate changes and to reveal spatial anomaly patterns in the aftermath of Icelandic eruptions, we additionally used a network of tree-ring proxy data to develop a climate field reconstruction of extratropical NH JJA temperatures spanning the last 1500 years. In this approach, we grouped the 25 chronologies from NVOLC v2 into 11 regional clusters using a minimum coefficient correlation (r) threshold above 0.3 (p< 0.05) over the common period of the chronologies. Based on the threshold, we included only one chronology in the Quebec, central Europe, Siberia–Taymir, Siberia–Yakutia and China–Qilian Mountains clusters, whereas five composed the western Europe region. In the six clusters that included multiple chronologies, we derived reconstructions from bootstrapped nested PCRs. In the remaining five clusters, we used a bootstrap OLS linear regression to quantify interannual variations of summer temperatures. Based on CoE statistics > 0.1, 3486 grid points have been reconstructed back to 500 CE. The smallest (Indigirka) and largest (Siberia–Polar Ural) clusters included 53 and 918 grid points, respectively.

4 Results

4.1 Cryptotephra analysis

4.1.1 1477 CE sulfate peak

A closer look at the sub-annual-resolution data around the sulfate peak attributed to 1477 CE shows that particle concentrations peak in late winter 1477 CE before sulfate concentrations peak approximately 2 months later during the spring, and elevated concentrations are broadly restricted to 1477 CE (Fig. 3b). Volcanic particles, including glass tephra shards, are transported and deposited rapidly (within days to weeks) following an eruption due to their relatively high density. However, the longer residence time of sulfate aerosols means that these concentrations can be elevated for an extended period following a volcanic eruption, which can be up to several years after a large eruption injecting aerosols high into the stratosphere (Robock, 2000). The relative time delay between peak particle and sulfate deposition can reflect the proximity of the eruptive source, with greater delays observed for more distal eruptions (e.g. Koffman et al., 2013, 2017; Smith et al., 2020). The sharp and narrow peak in sulfate concentrations observed in 1477 CE (in contrast to the one starting in 1458 CE; Fig. 1) and the short delay following the particle concentration peak are more typical of a Northern Hemisphere eruption local to Greenland, and the timing of their deposition early in 1477 CE, i.e. during winter, is consistent with the historical date for the V1477 eruption.

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Figure 4Geochemical characterisation of glass tephra shards from the TUNU2013 78.655 m deposit with comparisons to Icelandic proximal material and analyses of Veiðivötn 1477 CE occurrences. Panel (a) is as follows. (i) Inset of total alkali versus silica plot showing the tholeiitic basalt composition of the TUNU2013 78.655 m deposit. Chemical classification and nomenclature after Le Maitre et al. (1989). Division line between alkaline and sub-alkaline material from MacDonald and Katsura (1964). (ii, iii) Geochemical characterisation of the TUNU2013 78.655 m deposit compared to geochemical envelopes for several Icelandic tholeiitic volcanic systems. Geochemical envelopes derived from non-normalised whole rock and glass shard analyses from deposits proximal to the Icelandic volcanic systems; adapted from Óladóttir et al. (2020) and references within. Non-normalised TUNU2013 78.655 m data utilised to permit a direct comparison with the published geochemical envelopes. Panel (b) is as follows. (i–iii) Comparisons of individual analyses from the geochemical characterisation of TUNU2013 78.655 m to characterisations of several Icelandic and non-Icelandic occurrences of the Veiðivötn 1477 CE eruption. Geochemical data for V1477 occurrences from Svartárvatn (Larsen et al., 2002), Helluvaðstjörn (Lawson et al., 2007), Skaftártunga (Streeter and Dugmore, 2014), Hvítárvatn (Larsen et al., 2011), Lake Lögurinn (Gudmundsdóttir et al., 2016), Gripdeild (Bergþórsdóttir, 2014), a compilation of six sites around the Vatnajökull ice cap (Óladóttir et al., 2011), MD99-2275 (Larsen et al., 2002; Gudmundsdóttir et al., 2011), An Loch Mór (Chambers et al., 2004) and Lake Getvaltjärnen (Davies et al., 2007). All data are provided in the Supplement and plotted on a normalised anhydrous basis.

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Within the TUNU2013 ice sample covering a depth of 78.515–78.655 m (QUB-1965),  126 tephra glass shards were observed (Fig. 3c). These shards have a greenish-brown colour, display platy to blocky morphologies and no physical alternation, contain occasional microlites, and have long-axis diameters up to 30 µm. The major element composition of 16 of these shards was analysed, and they form a single homogenous population with a tholeiitic basaltic composition (Fig. 4ai). The most likely high-latitude Northern Hemisphere volcanic source of material of this composition is Iceland, and comparisons to the geochemistry of material proximal to several Icelandic volcanic systems show it was most likely sourced from the Veiðivötn–Bárðarbunga system (Fig. 4aii and iii).

Comparisons were made to the collation of geochemical analyses for proximal and distal occurrences of tephra produced during the V1477 event. Graphical comparisons show that for most element oxides, e.g. Al2O3, TiO2, K2O and SiO2, there are close similarities between the concentrations observed in the TUNU2013 shards and the proximal and distal V1477 occurrences (Fig. 4bi and ii). However, for elements such as Na2O, FeO and MgO, some offsets, most notably of up to 1 wt % for MgO, can be observed between the main populations (Fig. 4biii). However, some individual analyses from the V1477 occurrences, which could be dismissed as outliers, do have MgO concentrations similar to those from the TUNU2013 78.655 m shards (Fig. 4biii). The geochemical differences are reflected in statistical comparisons between the TUNU2013 tephra and the collation of V1477 data (Tables S5 and S6). Statistical distance tests show that in comparison to  36 % of the V1477 occurrences the composition of TUNU2013 78.655 m is statistically different at the 99 % confidence interval, and the D2 values for several other comparisons are just below the critical value (Table S5). A matrix of similarity coefficient comparisons between the average compositions of the tephra characterisations shows that all of the comparisons of prior V1477 occurrences have high values above the typical thresholds accepted as confirming that characterisations of Icelandic basaltic eruptions are identical, with all comparisons > 0.95 and the vast majority > 0.97 (Table S6). In contrast, comparisons between TUNU2013 78.655 m and the V1477 occurrences range between 0.917 and 0.957, values typically thought to indicate that the tephras originate from the same volcanic source but not the same eruption (Table S6; Begét et al., 1992; Abbott et al., 2018).

Geochemical offsets can result from tephra shards with the same composition being analysed under contrasting operating conditions on different microprobes and/or at different times (Kuehn et al., 2011). However, a comparison of secondary standard analyses from the analytical periods for the TUNU2013 shards and those from the Skaftártunga occurrence of V1477 (Streeter and Dugmore, 2014) strongly indicates that the geochemical offsets are not the result of analytical issues but are real differences in composition between the sample datasets (Fig. S1). Furthermore, the V1477 tephra analysed as a QUB Veiðivötn internal standard during the same analytical period as the TUNU2013 shards did not display the same MgO offset, but its MgO values are consistent with the main V1477 population (Fig. S2).

Overall, despite the geochemical offset, the evidence supporting the correlation of the TUNU2013 78.655 m tephra layer with the V1477 event is strong. Firstly, the geochemical differences between TUNU2013 78.655 m and the V1477 occurrences are only slight, and for most elements the concentrations are highly similar. Possible explanations for the differences in composition will be discussed in Sect. 5.4. Secondly, the ice-core chemistry and the shard geochemistry indicate that TUNU2013 78.655 m was sourced from a Northern Hemisphere volcanic region close to Greenland and has a composition matching products of the Veiðivötn–Bárðarbunga volcanic system. Thirdly, while it is acknowledged that there can be uncertainties in ice-core chronologies, chronological uncertainties in this age range would be of the order of years rather than the tens to hundreds of years required for TUNU2013 78.655 m to be the product of one of the other known Veiðivötn–Bárðarbunga eruptions (e.g. V1717, V1500,  V1410), which have a similar geochemical composition. In addition, of these eruptions V1477 had the largest magnitude and thus the greatest potential for widespread deposition of its fallout. Lastly, as the Icelandic tephrostratigraphy is well documented over the last 1000 years (e.g. Thordarson and Larsen, 2007; Larsen and Eiríksson, 2008), it is unlikely that TUNU2013 78.655 m was deposited following a previously unknown eruption of the Veiðivötn–Bárðarbunga volcanic system of a sufficient magnitude to deposit tephra over Greenland.

4.1.2 1479 CE sulfate peak

A limited number of tephra shards were found in the ice samples from the later microparticle peak at the start of 1479 CE, with up to three brown shards identified in both QUB-1963 and QUB-1962. A tephra layer with a rhyolitic composition was previously identified around 1479 CE by Fiacco et al. (1993) in the GISP2 ice core and attributed to an eruption from Mount St. Helens, USA, dated using dendrochronology (Yamaguchi, 1983), although the geochemical match with this source is ambiguous (Abbott and Davies, 2012). The relationship between microparticle and sulfate concentrations for the 1479 CE event in TUNU2013 matches the observations of Fiacco et al. (1993), which also showed a peak in microparticles preceding a sulfate peak by about half a year (Fig. 3b). The tephra shards from QUB-1963 and QUB-1962 have not yet been geochemically analysed due to their small size (< 20 µm) and low concentration. Therefore, it was not possible to determine if they correlate with the rhyolitic 1479 CE tephra of Fiacco et al. (1993); however, a geochemical correlation is unlikely as the physical characteristics of the TUNU2013 shards are indicative of a mafic composition. Based on the physical characteristics it is possible that these shards represent remobilised material from V1477; however, without geochemical analysis we cannot determine if this is the case or if the tephra derived from another eruption.

4.2 Differential dating of volcanic events in the 1450s CE

Through the identification of the V1477 tephra layer in TUNU2013, in direct association with the large sulfate peak at  78.56 m, it is demonstrated that the prior assumption that it represents aerosol deposition from the 1477 CE eruption of Veiðivötn is correct. As such, the assertion that 1477 CE can be used as the age for this ice-core depth with 0 years of uncertainty is appropriate. Using this age as a fix point for the annual layer counts for TUNU2013 between 1445 CE and 1485 CE it is shown that the ages of 1453 CE and 1458 CE for the start of the two sulfate peaks in the 1450s CE are in agreement with those derived from the NS1-2011 chronology (Fig. 5). These ages were based on annual layer counts from NEEM-2011-S1 using an age of 1477 CE for a notable sulfate peak in that sequence (Sigl et al., 2015). The close correspondence between the nssS records from TUNU2013 and NEEM-2011-S1 and the strong annual signals in TUNU2013 provide further evidence to support those ages for the events (Fig. S3).

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Figure 5High-resolution nssS and annual layer dating of the TUNU2013 ice core between 1445 and 1485 CE using a multiparameter approach. Concentration records are shown for nssS, Ca, Na and nssS / Na, with grey dashed lines indicating the assigned years. The red shaded bar indicates the location of the V1477 tephra layer in the TUNU2013 record. The green shaded bars indicate the two sulfate peaks in the 1450s CE in TUNU2013.

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4.3 Tree-ring-based reconstruction of summer temperature cooling induced by Icelandic eruptions

Within the NVOLC v2 reconstruction, each nest passed all verification tests, R2 and RE, for the calibration period, as well as r2 and CoE for the verification period. For the 1420–1650 CE period (Fig. 6a), the unfiltered reconstruction indicates a cooling in the aftermath of V1477 of 0.35 C relative to the 1961–1990 CE reference period, the 356th coldest NH summer since 500 CE (i.e. rank 356). By comparison, stronger cooling is observed following the Icelandic Eldgjá 939 CE (0.5 C in 940 CE, rank 205) and Laki 1783 CE (1.2 C, rank 9) eruptions. More extreme negative anomalies are observed following other major explosive volcanic eruptions, including 1.6 C in 1601 CE (rank 1, Huaynaputina), 1.5 C in 1816 CE (rank 3, Tambora), 1.4 C in 536 CE (rank 4, unidentified volcano) and 1.3 C in 1453 CE (rank 5, unidentified volcano) (Fig. 6a). After filtering with a 30-year running mean centred around the year of the calculated anomaly, the NH summer cooling prevailing in 1477 CE was 0.1 C (Fig. 6b), the 524th coldest NH summer since 500 CE. Our findings are corroborated through comparisons with other recent large-scale reconstructions, Sch2015 (Schneider et al., 2015) and NTREND2015 (Wilson et al., 2016), which rank 1477 CE as the 538th (0.04 C) and 182th (0.23 C) coolest summers, respectively (Fig. 6b). The Sch2015, NTREND2015 and NVOLC v2 reconstructions all show more significant cooling in the aftermath of the Eldgjá and Laki eruptions, with cooling ranging between 0.4 and 0.6 C and between 0.7 and 1 C, respectively (Fig. 6b). Grouping the 25 chronologies into 11 clusters enables an estimation of the regional variability of summer cooling induced by the Icelandic eruptions (Fig. 6c). Based on this approach, the JJA gridded temperature reconstructions for 940 CE and 1783 CE (Fig. 6c) indicate that volcanic forcing induced widespread cooling over the NH. Extremely cold conditions prevailed in Scandinavia, western Europe and coastal Alaska in 940 CE, as well as on the Yamal Peninsula and in Alaska in 1783 CE. Less consistent patterns are observed in the reconstructed temperatures following the V1477 eruption, with cold temperatures in Scandinavia, western Europe and central Asia, contrasting with above-average anomalies over North America, in the Polar Ural and on the Yamal Peninsula (Fig. 6c).

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Figure 6(a) Northern hemispheric (40–90 N) summer (JJA) temperature reconstruction depicting the cooling induced by selected 15th to 17th century volcanic eruptions. The red line depicts 30-year smoothed temperatures, whereas the blue line indicates annual temperature anomalies. The blue shaded area gives the 95 % confidence interval. (b) Cooling induced by the most prominent Icelandic eruptions of the last 1500 years in 939 CE (Eldgjá), 1477 CE (Veiðivötn) and 1783 CE (Laki) in the NVOLC v2 (Guillet et al., 2020), Sch2015 (Schneider et al., 2015), NTREND2015 (Wilson et al., 2016) and Scandinavian cluster of NVOLC v2. (c) Spatial patterns of Northern Hemisphere temperatures the year following the three major Icelandic eruptions in the last 1500 years.

5 Discussion

5.1 Confirming the timing and hemisphere of mid-15th century volcanic eruptions

The identification of the V1477 tephra layer in TUNU2013 has demonstrated the veracity of the age of 1477 CE commonly used for a keystone sulfate peak identified in many ice cores from Greenland. This provides evidence to support the accuracy of the NS1-2011 Greenland ice-core chronology around this period and corroborates the ages proposed by Sigl et al. (2013) for the sulfate peaks in the mid-1450s CE in the Greenland ice-core records deposited following large volcanic eruptions in 1452 or early 1453 CE and 1458 CE. The ages, temporal separation and duration of sulfate deposition for these events are consistent with those for two volcanic eruptions recorded in the Antarctic WDC core, whose ages were derived using an independent annually counted timescale and not bipolar synchronisation of the sulfate records (Sigl et al., 2013; Fig. 1). As highlighted by Sigl et al. (2013), the sulfate deposition in Greenland relating to the later event is greater than for the earlier event and is also consistent with the record from Antarctica. Further independent confirmation of the matching of the events could be achieved if the temporal evolution of sulfur isotope anomalies over the peak starting in 1458 CE were consistent between ice cores from both polar ice sheets, as was demonstrated recently for the Samalas 1257 CE eruption (Burke et al., 2019).

While factors other than latitude may influence the stratospheric distribution of sulfate between the two hemispheres, aerosol modelling suggests that a likely range of latitudinal positions for eruption sources can be approximated based on the asymmetry of sulfate deposition between Greenland and Antarctica (Toohey et al., 2016, 2019; Marshall et al., 2019). Cumulative sulfate deposition for the 1453 CE event was higher in Greenland (25 kg km−2) than in Antarctica (5 kg km−2), as deduced from a network of polar ice cores (Sigl et al., 2014; Toohey and Sigl, 2017). This suggests that 83 % of the atmospheric sulfate burden remained in the Northern Hemisphere, which is more likely to occur after an eruption from a source located in that hemisphere. Conversely, for the 1458 CE event, sulfate deposition was higher in Antarctica (64 kg km−2) than in Greenland (35 kg km−2), suggesting that 64 % of the atmospheric sulfate burden remained in the Southern Hemisphere and that we can attribute the eruption to a source in that hemisphere.

As such, these findings demonstrate that the scenario proposed, but not favoured, by Esper et al. (2017), is correct; i.e. a strongly asymmetric Southern Hemisphere sulfate-loading event occurred in 1457 or 1458 CE without causing large-scale Northern Hemisphere cooling. In addition, the findings back up the argument of Sigl et al. (2013) that the first eruption in 1452 or early 1453 CE occurred in the Northern Hemisphere and caused the distinct climatic cooling observed in the tree-ring records. The close succession of the two large sulfur-rich volcanic eruptions was most likely the cause of the longevity of the 15-year cold period following 1453 CE.

5.2 Testing ice-core chronologies and determining volcanic sources using tephra horizons

This study has shown the power of using historically dated tephra horizons to test the accuracy of ice-core chronologies and assumptions regarding the source of sulfate aerosols deposited over ice sheets, which has critical implications for assessing the climatic impact of eruptions. The example provided here can be added to others from Greenland, with tephra from Öræfajökull 1362 CE, Laki 1783 CE and Katmai 1912 CE having all been identified in ice cores from Greenland in association with chemical indicators previously attributed to those eruptions (Palais et al., 1991; Fiacco et al., 1994; Coulter et al., 2012). Determining the source of notable peaks in sulfate or other volcanic indicators (e.g. acidity and electrical conductivity) using tephra is necessary, when possible, as associations with specific events can become embedded in the literature with limited supporting evidence, even if only originally proposed as a possibility. For example, associations between chemical indicators and the Hekla 1104 CE and Vesuvius 79 CE eruptions, which were previously used as historical tie points with no uncertainty while building chronologies (Hammer et al., 1980; Zielinski et al., 1994; Vinther et al., 2006), have been found to be inaccurate following re-evaluation of the Greenland ice-core chronologies (Sigl et al., 2015). The volcanic signal previously associated with the Hekla 1104 CE eruption has been re-dated to 1108 CE, and Guillet et al. (2020) have recently proposed that it can be linked to an eruption of Mount Asama, Japan; however, at present this is not supported by tephra evidence. The volcanic signal previously associated with Vesuvius in 79 CE has been re-dated to 87–88 CE by Sigl et al. (2015). The re-evaluation of the Greenland ice-core chronology was aided by documented historical reports (Sigl et al., 2015) and cosmogenic radionuclides in tree rings and ice cores as another form of isochronous marker horizon, most likely produced by solar particle events (Miyake et al., 2012, 2015; Mekhaldi et al., 2015; Büntgen et al., 2018). This highlights the fact that tephra is just one of the tools that can be used to evaluate and improve ice-core chronologies.

Testing associations between volcanic indicators in ice cores and specific events using tephra could be useful for determining the source of the two eruptions in the 1450s CE, whose sources are currently unknown. The 1458 CE event has often been attributed to the formation of the submarine Kuwae caldera; however, the evidence is inconclusive and circumstantial, so the source is still open for debate. Hartman et al. (2019) characterised tephra from an Antarctic ice core found in association with the 1458 CE event and concluded that it was distinct to eruptive products from Kuwae; however, despite some geochemical similarities to the products of a local Antarctic volcano, a definitive source was not proposed. Based on the size of the particles and the expression of the sulfate in different ice cores, Hartman et al. (2019) suggest that it resulted from a tropospheric aerosol cloud; however, this is inconsistent with sulfur isotope evidence from Antarctica for stratospheric injection of the sulfate cloud (Baroni et al., 2008; Gautier et al., 2019). A local tropospheric source is also inconsistent with the widespread deposition of volcanic sulfate that prevailed for 2–3 years as observed in a large network of 16 ice cores all over Antarctica (Sigl et al., 2014; Toohey and Sigl, 2017). Further studies of sulfur isotopes coupled with attempts to identify tephra associated with both events in the 1450s CE, as well as more work on proximal records, could aid in conclusively identifying their sources.

5.3 Use of V1477 as a chronostratigraphic marker for the inception of the LIA

The mid-15th century is widely considered to be the inception of the LIA (e.g. Owens et al., 2017; Büntgen et al., 2020), which was potentially intensified by the large volcanic events in the 1450s CE (Miller et al., 2012; Schurer et al., 2014; Slawinska and Robock, 2018). As such, if the V1477 tephra layer could be traced in more palaeoclimatic archives it could act as a useful chronostratigraphic marker for constraining the chronology of different proxy records and assessing the phasing and spatial variability of climatic changes associated with the LIA onset. The identification of the V1477 tephra layer in a Greenland ice core corroborates the findings of past studies of terrestrial sequences from Ireland and Sweden (Chambers et al., 2004; Davies et al., 2007) that following the eruption its products were dispersed over a wide geographical area. Therefore, it has significant potential to act as a chronostratigraphic tie line linking records from Greenland, the North Atlantic and northwestern Europe. As one of the most explosive Icelandic eruptions of the last 1200 years, it is notable that V1477 has not already been identified at more sites and established as a key horizon in the tephrochronological framework for northern Europe (Lawson et al., 2012). The generally lower explosivity of Icelandic basaltic eruptions reduces the likelihood of the injection of material high into the atmosphere (Lawson et al., 2012), and the potential transport distance of the tephra is then dependent upon tropospheric conditions at the time of the eruption. Differences between glass shards produced during basaltic and rhyolitic eruptions may further constrain the long-range transport of basaltic glass tephra shards, with the greater density and generally larger grain size making the shards more prone to rapid fallout (Watson et al., 2017). However, it seems unlikely that these factors can explain the lack of more widespread V1477 occurrences in NW Europe given the prior distal identifications as well as the known high explosivity and plume height of the eruption. It has been proposed that basaltic tephra shards are not identified in some terrestrial sequences as they can degrade in acidic peatland environments (Pollard et al., 2003) or are overlooked in lake sediments due to the difficulties in separating and identifying basaltic shards (Lawson et al., 2012). In addition, non-identification could be due to (1) spatial heterogeneity in distal ash deposition (Davies et al., 2010b), (2) latitudinal differences in wind strength, since although rarely identified in continental European sequences basaltic shards have been identified in a Russian Arctic site located a similar distance from Iceland but further north (Vakhrameeva et al., 2020), and/or (3) this specific time interval not being investigated. Therefore, we propose that the potential use of V1477 as a chronostratigraphic marker could be increased through focused cryptotephra investigations of specific time windows and, for lake sediments, incorporating magnetic separation processing (e.g. Mackie et al., 2002) to maximise the isolation of basaltic material.

A key consideration for any future studies aiming to trace V1477 is the strong similarity between the geochemical compositions of V1477 and other notable Veiðivötn-sourced tephra layers such as V1717,  V1410 and V877, the Landnám tephra (Cage et al., 2011; Harning et al., 2018). To date, only the V1477 and Landnám tephras have been definitively identified in European records, although the potential presence of tephra shards from other Veiðivötn eruptions (e.g.  V1159, V1717, V1766 and V1797) has been discussed (Plunkett and Pilcher, 2018; Vakhrameeva et al., 2020). Therefore, in palaeoarchives with a lower temporal resolution than ice cores, independent chronological evidence would be required to support any correlations with specific Veiðivötn eruptions, such as the radiocarbon age Davies et al. (2007) used to support the correlation of the Lake Getvaltjärnen deposit with V1477.

5.4 Geochemical variability of V1477 deposits

A notable observation from this work was a slight geochemical offset between tephra shards from TUNU2013 78.655 m and the V1477 occurrences (Fig. 4b). However, as outlined in Sect. 4.1.1 it does not hinder the attribution of TUNU2013 78.655 m to V1477. The offsets are most notable for the MgO concentrations, which, except for a few outlier analyses from other deposits, are  0.75–1 wt % higher in the TUNU2013 shards (Fig. 4biii). MgO concentrations around 7–8 wt % are not atypical for Veiðivötn products (Fig. 4aii) but are more characteristic of Veiðivötn eruptions that occurred earlier in the Holocene than V1477 (Óladóttir et al., 2011; Caracciolo et al., 2020).

The difference in MgO concentrations could indicate that the TUNU2013 shards have a more primitive, i.e. less evolved, geochemical composition than shards from the other V1477 occurrences. A general trend of increasing MgO values with decreasing FeO concentrations can be observed in the V1477 data (Fig. 4biii) and is most obvious in the characterisation of V1477 from Skaftártunga (Streeter and Dugmore, 2014). Within the Skaftártunga characterisation, alongside shards with strong similarities to the other V1477 analyses, more geochemically evolved shards with lower MgO concentrations and higher FeO values than most of the other V1477 analyses can be observed, as can two shard analyses with MgO and FeO values comparable to the TUNU2013 78.655 m data (Fig. 4biii). This overall trend could be indicative of geochemical evolution during the eruption; however, such clear fractionation trends are not observed for other element pairs. The bilobate form of proximal V1477 deposits on isopach maps and differences in the size and morphology of tephra shards between the lobes indicate that differential dispersal occurred with plumes to the ENE and NNW of the fissure (Benjamínsson, 1981). It has been suggested that the two lobes resulted from either a shift in wind direction from the SW to SE during the eruption (Benjamínsson, 1981) or bifurcation of the volcanic plume due to a crosswind (Ernst et al., 1994). A change in wind direction during the course of the eruption could have caused products from different temporal phases to be transported along the two dispersal axes and account for the slight differences between geochemical characterisations from specific sites. Geochemical variability between coarser and finer grain-size fractions deposited at more proximal and more distal sites, respectively, could also be a factor; however, significant differences in grain size are unlikely for the more distal deposits, and when compared they still display the offset in MgO.

As prior studies have not identified the geochemical differences highlighted in this study the offsets could have resulted from analytical uncertainty; however, this is unlikely based on the secondary and internal standard analyses made when the TUNU2013 shards were analysed (Figs. S1 and S2). Further investigation of V1477 occurrences at proximal sites and in other Greenland ice cores could determine if the geochemical offset is consistent for other deposits along the same dispersal axis or can be related to grain-size differences, and the potential for offsets should be considered within any attempts to trace this horizon.

5.5 Climatic impact of V1477 relative to other Icelandic eruptions

The definitive attribution of the 1477 CE sulfate peak in Greenland to the Icelandic V1477 eruption also provided an opportunity to assess the climatic impact of this explosive eruption in comparison to the effects of other historical eruptions. Overall, despite having a VEI of 6, the NH cooling following V1477 was relatively weak and spatially incoherent in comparison to the less explosive Icelandic Laki and Eldgjá eruptions (VEI 4–5) and more explosive lower-latitude eruptions, e.g. Tambora and Huaynaputina (Fig. 6; Sect. 4.3). The greater impact of the more effusive Icelandic eruptions relative to the V1477 eruption can be attributed to the huge sulfate load emitted during the Laki and Eldgjá eruptions over prolonged periods of time ( 8 months and > 2 years, respectively) in comparison to the short-lived (days to weeks) duration of the V1477 eruption (Thordarson et al., 2001; Thordarson and Larsen, 2007). The short residence time of sulfate in the atmosphere following the V1477 eruption is highlighted by the sharp and narrow nature of the 1477 CE sulfate peak in the Greenland ice cores (Fig. 1).

6 Conclusions

Using sulfate and particle concentration records as a guide, volcanic ash from the Icelandic eruption of Veiðivötn in 1477 CE has been identified as a cryptotephra in the TUNU2013 Greenland ice core. This identification verifies the widely assumed source of a notable sulfate peak present in many Greenland ice cores, and it confirms the accuracy of the NS1-2011 chronology around this depth. In addition, using annual layer counting the ages of 1452 CE and 1458 CE attributed to two volcanic events in the 1450s CE are confirmed with high accuracy. While being considered one of the most explosive Icelandic eruptions of the last 1200 years, a tree-ring-based reconstruction of summer temperatures demonstrates that V1477 caused weak and spatially incoherent summer cooling in comparison to other recent Icelandic eruptions that, while less explosive, emitted a higher sulfate load. The timing of the eruption around the inception of the LIA in the NH means V1477 could act as a chronostratigraphic marker for assessing climatic changes associated with this onset. However, potential geochemical variability between V1477 deposits and geochemical similarities with the products of other eruptions from Veiðivötn must be considered when correlations are being assessed.

Data availability

The data presented and utilised in this study are available in the Supplement.

Supplement

The supplement related to this article is available online at: https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-17-565-2021-supplement.

Author contributions

All authors contributed to obtaining and analysing the data utilised in the study. MSi and GP conceived the research. JRM, NJC and MSi contributed ice-core glaciochemical records. GP and JRP performed tephra geochemical analyses. MSt and CC produced the North Hemisphere tree-ring-based summer temperature reconstruction. PMA wrote the paper with MSt and CC contributing Sects. 3.3 and 4.3 as well as Fig. 6. All authors contributed to improving and editing the paper.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Special issue statement

This article is part of the special issue “Interdisciplinary studies of volcanic impacts on climate and society”. It is not associated with a conference.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Carla Grimaldi for compiling some of the V1477 geochemical data. Thanks to Guðrún Larsen for a detailed description of the history of the dating of V1477 and Esther Ruth Guðmundsdóttir for providing geochemical data from the V1477 occurrence in Lake Lögurinn. Thanks to Richard Streeter and Chris Hayward for providing secondary standard data related to the V1477 occurrence from Skaftártunga. We thank Karen Fontijn and an anonymous reviewer for their comments that have helped to improve the paper. Thanks also to Matthew Toohey, the guest editor for this paper, for his helpful comments. This research benefitted from the participation of the authors in the Volcanic Impacts on Climate and Society (VICS) working group of the Past Global Changes (PAGES) project.

Financial support

Peter M. Abbott and Michael Sigl received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement no. 820047). Michael Sigl received funding from the Geoscience Department and the NFR TOPPFORK project “VIKINGS” (grant no. 275191) at the University of Oslo. The collection and analysis of the TUNU2013 core were supported by a US National Science Foundation grant (no. 1204176) to Joseph R. McConnell, with additional support provided (grant no. 1925417) to Joseph R. McConnell and Nathan J. Chellman for the volcanic interpretation. Markus Stoffel and Christophe Corona received funding from the Swiss National Science Foundation through the SNSF Sinergia CALDERA project (grant agreement no. CRSII5_183571).

Review statement

This paper was edited by Matthew Toohey and reviewed by Karen Fontijn and one anonymous referee.

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Volcanic eruptions are a key source of climatic variability, and greater understanding of their past influence will increase the accuracy of future projections. We use volcanic ash from a 1477 CE Icelandic eruption in a Greenlandic ice core as a temporal fix point to constrain the timing of two eruptions in the 1450s CE and their climatic impact. Despite being the most explosive Icelandic eruption in the last 1200 years, the 1477 CE event had a limited impact on Northern Hemisphere climate.