The Darkest Year
The Volcanic Winter of 536 AD and the Absolute Collapse of the Ancient World
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- $5.99
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- $5.99
Publisher Description
Historians often debate the worst year to be alive, but scientific consensus points to a single, terrifying date: 536 AD. A massive, mysterious volcanic eruption spewed an impenetrable veil of ash across the Northern Hemisphere, plunging Europe, the Middle East, and parts of Asia into a literal darkness that lasted for eighteen months. Temperatures plummeted, crops failed globally, and mass starvation brought entire empires to their knees.
This book investigates the geological and historical evidence of this apocalyptic event. It reveals how the sudden climate shock destroyed the remnants of the Roman economy, halted the expansion of civilizations, and created the perfect, weakened environment for the Justinianic Plague to wipe out half the population of the Mediterranean.
By analyzing ice cores, tree rings, and ancient chronicles, this deep-dive exposes how fragile human civilization is against the raw mechanics of the planet. Learn how humanity survived the literal dark ages and what the devastating climate collapse of 536 AD can teach us about our own environmental vulnerabilities today.