27 ICE TIME
I all a dream.
t sun inguisarsDid wander . . .
—Byron, “Darkness”
IN 1815 on t mountainnamed tambora exploded spectacularly, killing a s blast andassociated tsunamis. It volcanic explosion in ten timest St. to sixty tom bombs.
Ne travel terribly fast in times ran a small story—actually a letter from a merc—seven monter t. But by time tambora’seffects . ty-six cubic miles of smoky as, and grit mospo cool.
Sunsets blearily colorful, an effect memorably captured by tist J. M.
. turner, ly ted under anoppressive, dusky pall. It inspired the Byron lines above.
Spring never came and summer never summer. Crops everyed typy-five teen o Deats continued until June andalmost no planted seed ock died or o be prematurelyslaug certainly t for farmers inmodern times. Yet globally temperature fell by only about 1.5 degrees Fa. Eartural tat, as scientists e instrument.
teentury le Ice Age, as it ted all kinds of ry events—frost fairs on ting races along Dutc are mostly impossible no y ury geologists for beingsloo realize t t balmy compared muc fair.
t t. tteredic reindeer in tranded in improbable places—and ten came up ive but not terriblyplausible explanations. One Frencuralist named de Luc, trying to explain eboulders o rest one flanks of tains, suggestedt per t of apopgun. term for a displaced boulder is an erratic, but in teentury to apply more often to to the rocks.
t Britis Arted t if James ton, ted Szerland