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Volcanic Dust in the Atmosphere and the Interpretation of African Eclipse Traditions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2014
Extract
The purpose of this discussion is to call attention to the presence at various times of large quantities of volcanic dust in the atmosphere. Remarkable visual effects from this dust may imply hitherto unconsidered problems in identifying alleged references to solar eclipses in African chronicles and oral traditions. Climatologist Hubert Lamb has compiled the data on volcanic eruptions and dust veils since 1500 AD and attempted to determine possible meteorological effects.
Contemporary notions of volcanic activity are predisposed to spectacular lava flows, which make more interesting journalism and greater popular interest. However, eruptions characterized by free-flowing lava –– conventionally termed Type A –– are relatively unimportant in the volcanic dust question. We are interested in so-called Type B events, usually violent explosions resulting from the inability of lava or steam to find convenient outlets. Such an explosion may inject huge quantities of dust and debris into the atmosphere, causing a wide variety of visual anomalies as they are carried around the world by high-altitude winds. If the dust veil is sufficiently dense it may even cause short-term alterations in weather patterns.
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- Copyright © African Studies Association 1977
References
Notes
1. Lamb, Hubert H., “Volcanic Dust in the Atmosphere: With a Chronology and Assessment of its Meteorological Significance,” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 266(1970), pp. 425–533.Google Scholar
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4. Ibid., pp. 463-4, 494.
5. Gray, Richard, “Eclipse Maps,” JAH, 6(1965), p. 255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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