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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,690 --> 00:00:08,120 Our planet is capable of unleashing extreme chaos. 2 00:00:08,160 --> 00:00:15,430 Volcanoes, earthquakes, hurricanes, and floods 3 00:00:15,470 --> 00:00:18,000 can cause untold devastation. 4 00:00:19,370 --> 00:00:20,740 We may think we've seen 5 00:00:20,770 --> 00:00:23,970 the worst Mother Nature can throw at us, 6 00:00:24,010 --> 00:00:27,780 but scientists struggling to understand these disasters 7 00:00:27,810 --> 00:00:30,510 are discovering evidence that even more extreme events 8 00:00:30,550 --> 00:00:33,310 have struck in the past. 9 00:00:33,350 --> 00:00:35,850 So this is about 13 times 10 00:00:35,890 --> 00:00:38,220 more powerful than the Pompeii eruption. 11 00:00:38,260 --> 00:00:40,390 They're uncovering clues 12 00:00:40,420 --> 00:00:44,290 that the worst catastrophes in history 13 00:00:44,330 --> 00:00:46,860 could strike again. 14 00:00:50,930 --> 00:00:55,340 Nearly 1,000 years ago, a disaster shook the world. 15 00:00:55,370 --> 00:00:57,570 This is one of the largest eruptions 16 00:00:57,610 --> 00:00:59,410 in the last 10,000 years. 17 00:00:59,440 --> 00:01:05,980 A volcano so powerful it chilled the entire planet. 18 00:01:06,020 --> 00:01:07,850 But where was it? 19 00:01:07,880 --> 00:01:09,450 No one knew the source of the eruption. 20 00:01:09,490 --> 00:01:15,620 The clues are here, buried and hidden all around the world. 21 00:01:15,660 --> 00:01:17,630 Now, scientists come together 22 00:01:17,660 --> 00:01:22,060 to scour our volatile Earth, to solve the mystery 23 00:01:22,100 --> 00:01:24,870 of killer volcanoes. 24 00:01:27,970 --> 00:01:30,070 Right now, on NOVA. 25 00:01:32,000 --> 00:01:38,074 Advertise your product or brand here contact www.OpenSubtitles.org today 26 00:01:40,820 --> 00:01:44,150 Of all the forces of nature, 27 00:01:44,190 --> 00:01:46,550 volcanoes are among the most dangerous. 28 00:01:48,660 --> 00:01:49,990 They have the power 29 00:01:50,030 --> 00:01:56,230 to kill millions and disrupt the fabric of modern life. 30 00:01:56,270 --> 00:01:57,600 Volcanoes can have a global impact. 31 00:01:57,630 --> 00:02:01,440 Today, there are more than 1,500 32 00:02:01,470 --> 00:02:04,410 active volcanoes on Earth. 33 00:02:04,440 --> 00:02:08,280 About 50 erupt every year. 34 00:02:08,310 --> 00:02:12,480 Many are well known, like Vesuvius in Italy, 35 00:02:12,520 --> 00:02:16,120 and Mount St. Helens in Washington State. 36 00:02:16,150 --> 00:02:18,850 But could there be other slumbering giants 37 00:02:18,890 --> 00:02:20,150 that we have never heard of? 38 00:02:20,190 --> 00:02:22,360 Volcanoes that were once 39 00:02:22,390 --> 00:02:25,460 even more powerful and destructive 40 00:02:25,500 --> 00:02:27,700 than today's monsters? 41 00:02:27,730 --> 00:02:31,070 That's what a series of clues is suggesting. 42 00:02:33,770 --> 00:02:36,040 Scientists working across the world 43 00:02:36,070 --> 00:02:40,270 have begun to find evidence of a cataclysmic event, 44 00:02:40,310 --> 00:02:43,240 a mysterious eruption that could have been 45 00:02:43,280 --> 00:02:46,910 one of the largest in human history. 46 00:02:49,190 --> 00:02:53,250 And the trail starts in a very unexpected place. 47 00:02:58,090 --> 00:03:01,100 Here, in the heart of London, 48 00:03:01,130 --> 00:03:05,000 archaeologists uncover a surprise. 49 00:03:11,170 --> 00:03:14,980 While excavating a medieval cemetery, 50 00:03:15,010 --> 00:03:18,380 they happened upon a series of mass graves 51 00:03:18,420 --> 00:03:20,880 on the edges of the burial ground. 52 00:03:22,190 --> 00:03:24,890 Over 4,000 men, women and children, 53 00:03:24,920 --> 00:03:28,120 packed into large pits. 54 00:03:29,890 --> 00:03:34,800 The cause of death was not obvious. 55 00:03:34,830 --> 00:03:37,300 So what killed so many people, 56 00:03:37,330 --> 00:03:41,300 and why were they all buried together? 57 00:03:41,340 --> 00:03:43,370 When we find mass burial pits, 58 00:03:43,410 --> 00:03:46,270 we know that there's been a lot of people 59 00:03:46,310 --> 00:03:49,380 dying very quickly, and something has gone very wrong. 60 00:03:49,410 --> 00:03:53,350 As a first step to identifying the killer, 61 00:03:53,380 --> 00:03:56,080 archaeologist Don Walker and his team conducted 62 00:03:56,120 --> 00:04:01,190 radiocarbon tests, to find out how long ago they died. 63 00:04:01,220 --> 00:04:04,430 The hope was that they could tie their deaths 64 00:04:04,460 --> 00:04:06,260 to some historical event. 65 00:04:06,300 --> 00:04:10,060 But what they found merely deepened the mystery. 66 00:04:12,300 --> 00:04:17,740 The victims all died around 1250 in the Common Era. 67 00:04:17,770 --> 00:04:19,270 That ruled out 68 00:04:19,310 --> 00:04:21,880 one of the most notorious mass killers of the past, 69 00:04:21,910 --> 00:04:25,080 the Black Death, which ravaged Europe 70 00:04:25,110 --> 00:04:29,620 about a century later, in 1348. 71 00:04:30,950 --> 00:04:33,290 So what could have caused this mass killing? 72 00:04:40,160 --> 00:04:43,160 Don Walker heads to the British Library 73 00:04:43,200 --> 00:04:46,330 to consult ancient historical records from the period. 74 00:04:49,870 --> 00:04:54,610 This manuscript is a history of England. 75 00:04:54,640 --> 00:04:58,880 Over 750 years old, it was written in Latin 76 00:04:58,920 --> 00:05:02,280 by a monk named Matthew Paris. 77 00:05:05,760 --> 00:05:08,920 Among these chronicles, one account stands out... 78 00:05:08,960 --> 00:05:12,960 A description of bitterly cold weather around London 79 00:05:13,000 --> 00:05:15,900 in the spring and early summer of 1258 80 00:05:15,930 --> 00:05:18,070 that kills crops and livestock 81 00:05:18,100 --> 00:05:22,870 and leads to a deadly famine. 82 00:05:22,910 --> 00:05:25,670 It says owing to the scarcity of wheat, 83 00:05:25,710 --> 00:05:28,240 a large number of poor people died, 84 00:05:28,280 --> 00:05:31,550 and dead bodies were found in all directions, 85 00:05:31,580 --> 00:05:32,980 swollen and livid. 86 00:05:34,550 --> 00:05:36,880 Then Walker discovers 87 00:05:36,920 --> 00:05:39,150 a description that seems to match the discovery 88 00:05:39,190 --> 00:05:40,560 of the mass graves. 89 00:05:40,590 --> 00:05:43,820 When several corpses were found, 90 00:05:43,860 --> 00:05:46,430 large and spacious holes were dug in the cemeteries, 91 00:05:46,460 --> 00:05:49,460 and a great many bodies were laid in them together. 92 00:05:51,970 --> 00:05:55,500 And of course, as soon as I saw that, I got very excited, 93 00:05:55,540 --> 00:05:57,940 because it's exactly the kind of thing that we found 94 00:05:57,970 --> 00:06:00,440 at St. Mary Spital, where they were digging these huge pits. 95 00:06:04,850 --> 00:06:07,420 According to this text, 96 00:06:07,450 --> 00:06:10,820 the famine killed over 15,000 people in London. 97 00:06:10,850 --> 00:06:14,360 That's 30% of the city's population at the time. 98 00:06:14,390 --> 00:06:16,590 You're talking about something 99 00:06:16,630 --> 00:06:18,760 that was perhaps nearly as deadly as the Black Death. 100 00:06:20,130 --> 00:06:22,430 And possibly as widespread too. 101 00:06:25,340 --> 00:06:27,900 Other sources reveal the far-reaching impact 102 00:06:27,940 --> 00:06:32,110 of the extreme weather and its disastrous effect on crops. 103 00:06:34,840 --> 00:06:38,250 There are various records from this period... 104 00:06:38,280 --> 00:06:40,980 1258, 1259, 1260, 105 00:06:41,020 --> 00:06:43,680 in various parts of Europe and as far as Japan, 106 00:06:43,720 --> 00:06:46,850 that do attest to extreme impacts 107 00:06:46,890 --> 00:06:49,260 in terms of famine, in particular. 108 00:06:51,860 --> 00:06:53,660 Something devastating 109 00:06:53,700 --> 00:06:56,460 was plunging much of the Northern Hemisphere 110 00:06:56,500 --> 00:06:58,170 into a pattern of bitter winters 111 00:06:58,200 --> 00:07:02,000 and summers blighted by torrential rain. 112 00:07:02,040 --> 00:07:03,740 We thought perhaps this was something to do 113 00:07:03,770 --> 00:07:05,140 with some catastrophic event. 114 00:07:07,810 --> 00:07:09,710 Only one type of natural disaster 115 00:07:09,750 --> 00:07:13,710 could have such a widespread impact on the climate... 116 00:07:13,750 --> 00:07:16,520 A massive volcanic eruption. 117 00:07:18,150 --> 00:07:20,660 But which volcano was the culprit? 118 00:07:24,230 --> 00:07:27,190 The closest volcanoes are a thousand miles away in Iceland. 119 00:07:30,930 --> 00:07:35,470 In 2010, when a volcano known as Eyja erupted, 120 00:07:35,510 --> 00:07:37,410 it sent an ash cloud over Europe 121 00:07:37,440 --> 00:07:40,470 that disrupted air travel for weeks, 122 00:07:40,510 --> 00:07:43,040 stranding people all over the world. 123 00:07:45,420 --> 00:07:50,080 And historical records reveal that in 1783, 124 00:07:50,120 --> 00:07:52,320 eruptions from the Laki volcano 125 00:07:52,360 --> 00:07:55,820 caused mass deaths across Europe. 126 00:07:55,860 --> 00:07:58,960 It seems like an Icelandic volcano 127 00:07:59,000 --> 00:08:03,000 could be to blame for the mysterious 13th century event, 128 00:08:03,030 --> 00:08:06,400 but Walker came across another possibility. 129 00:08:06,440 --> 00:08:10,200 He became intrigued by one of the most massive eruptions 130 00:08:10,240 --> 00:08:11,470 in recorded history, 131 00:08:11,510 --> 00:08:16,480 even though it occurred just 200 years ago 132 00:08:16,510 --> 00:08:20,010 and was located much farther away... 133 00:08:20,050 --> 00:08:24,390 Mount Tambora in Indonesia. 134 00:08:26,590 --> 00:08:29,960 In April 1815, eyewitness accounts record 135 00:08:29,990 --> 00:08:33,290 that Mount Tambora erupted explosively. 136 00:08:35,330 --> 00:08:37,800 And this is one of the largest eruptions 137 00:08:37,830 --> 00:08:39,830 of the last 10,000 years. 138 00:08:42,270 --> 00:08:45,470 It's estimated over 60,000 people died 139 00:08:45,510 --> 00:08:48,210 in the shadow of this volcano. 140 00:08:49,750 --> 00:08:53,310 But the eruption had an even more far-reaching impact. 141 00:08:53,350 --> 00:08:57,720 In northern Europe and North America, 142 00:08:57,750 --> 00:09:01,860 the year after the eruption, 1816, is known as 143 00:09:01,890 --> 00:09:04,660 the year without a summer. 144 00:09:04,690 --> 00:09:08,030 In New York State, it snowed in June. 145 00:09:08,060 --> 00:09:14,340 In Europe, cold weather led to the worst famine for a century. 146 00:09:14,370 --> 00:09:16,400 The climate change 147 00:09:16,440 --> 00:09:18,710 caused agricultural failures, poor harvests, 148 00:09:18,740 --> 00:09:21,310 it pushed up grain prices, 149 00:09:21,340 --> 00:09:23,180 with many people perishing from malnourishment. 150 00:09:25,550 --> 00:09:28,220 So perhaps another powerful eruption 151 00:09:28,250 --> 00:09:34,720 could have caused the year without a summer in 1258. 152 00:09:34,760 --> 00:09:37,460 We began to think that perhaps this might be something to do 153 00:09:37,490 --> 00:09:39,560 with what had happened back in the 13th century. 154 00:09:39,600 --> 00:09:41,660 Perhaps this was why the people starved. 155 00:09:41,700 --> 00:09:44,470 But to pinpoint the location 156 00:09:44,500 --> 00:09:47,330 of the mysterious volcano, they needed to know more 157 00:09:47,370 --> 00:09:49,400 about its size and type of eruption. 158 00:09:51,540 --> 00:09:53,770 They look at one of the largest volcanic events 159 00:09:53,810 --> 00:09:55,040 in recent memory... 160 00:09:57,080 --> 00:10:03,850 the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines. 161 00:10:06,360 --> 00:10:09,060 Unlike volcanoes that erupt by pouring out rivers 162 00:10:09,090 --> 00:10:14,090 of molten lava over a long period of time, 163 00:10:14,130 --> 00:10:17,800 Pinatubo erupted suddenly and violently... 164 00:10:21,100 --> 00:10:23,070 ...when water and gases trapped inside the magma 165 00:10:23,110 --> 00:10:26,710 exploded with tremendous force, 166 00:10:26,740 --> 00:10:32,980 shattering the rock into millions of tiny particles 167 00:10:33,020 --> 00:10:36,420 and sending them high into the atmosphere. 168 00:10:36,450 --> 00:10:42,360 Explosive eruptions like this are the most dangerous of all. 169 00:10:44,490 --> 00:10:48,900 Pinatubo killed 847 people locally, 170 00:10:48,930 --> 00:10:53,030 and left over 200,000 homeless. 171 00:10:53,070 --> 00:10:57,070 But as with the other big Indonesian volcano, 172 00:10:57,110 --> 00:11:02,280 Mount Tambora, this eruption also had far-reaching effects. 173 00:11:02,310 --> 00:11:07,680 NASA's satellites were able to monitor the eruption. 174 00:11:07,720 --> 00:11:12,790 Pinatubo blasted out one cubic mile of superheated ash, 175 00:11:12,820 --> 00:11:16,290 but it also ejected hundreds of millions of tons 176 00:11:16,330 --> 00:11:21,300 of volcanic gases in a plume 22 miles high. 177 00:11:21,330 --> 00:11:24,530 The ash and the gases 178 00:11:24,570 --> 00:11:26,730 are dispersed through the atmosphere by the wind, 179 00:11:26,770 --> 00:11:28,670 and they can travel thousands of kilometers, 180 00:11:28,700 --> 00:11:29,931 tens of thousands of kilometers. 181 00:11:32,710 --> 00:11:34,940 But unlike heavy ash 182 00:11:34,980 --> 00:11:37,080 that soon falls out of the atmosphere, 183 00:11:37,110 --> 00:11:41,880 the lightweight gases persist for much longer. 184 00:11:41,920 --> 00:11:45,820 The most impactful gases are the sulphur-rich gases. 185 00:11:45,860 --> 00:11:49,560 And those gases will form little droplets of sulphuric acid 186 00:11:49,590 --> 00:11:50,930 in a large cloud. 187 00:11:53,000 --> 00:11:56,500 The tiny drops of sulphuric acid are called aerosols. 188 00:11:56,530 --> 00:11:59,900 And in a large cloud, high in the upper atmosphere, 189 00:11:59,940 --> 00:12:02,970 these aerosols caused enough sunlight to reflect 190 00:12:03,010 --> 00:12:06,310 out into space to cool the planet. 191 00:12:06,340 --> 00:12:10,280 The satellite data revealed that this sulphuric acid mist 192 00:12:10,310 --> 00:12:13,910 had a much more dramatic impact than the ash. 193 00:12:13,950 --> 00:12:17,920 It blocked enough sunlight to cool the entire planet 194 00:12:17,950 --> 00:12:22,820 by one degree Fahrenheit for two years. 195 00:12:22,860 --> 00:12:25,390 That doesn't sound very much, but it actually masks 196 00:12:25,430 --> 00:12:27,030 much stronger regional variations. 197 00:12:27,060 --> 00:12:30,200 And that translates into real impact on the ground 198 00:12:30,230 --> 00:12:31,170 in terms of crop yields. 199 00:12:32,800 --> 00:12:36,800 In 1258, the temperature drop was much greater 200 00:12:36,840 --> 00:12:39,440 than caused by Pinatubo. 201 00:12:39,480 --> 00:12:43,110 This suggests that whatever triggered this medieval disaster 202 00:12:43,150 --> 00:12:45,450 could have been much bigger. 203 00:12:50,050 --> 00:12:53,190 That indicated that a big event occurred somewhere in the world. 204 00:12:53,220 --> 00:12:57,520 But there was no record of a massive volcanic eruption. 205 00:12:58,560 --> 00:13:00,490 For volcanologists, 206 00:13:00,530 --> 00:13:01,800 it was the biggest mystery for us. 207 00:13:04,670 --> 00:13:07,200 So where could the culprit volcano have been? 208 00:13:07,240 --> 00:13:11,970 And after more than 750 years, could this killer volcano 209 00:13:12,010 --> 00:13:13,140 be found? 210 00:13:15,180 --> 00:13:18,980 It seemed the trail had gone cold, 211 00:13:19,020 --> 00:13:22,650 until a clue appeared, frozen in the polar ice. 212 00:13:27,860 --> 00:13:31,890 About 1,000 miles from the North Pole... 213 00:13:34,630 --> 00:13:37,770 ...researchers for the Greenland Ice Sheet Project 214 00:13:37,800 --> 00:13:42,170 are taking core samples from deep in the ice. 215 00:13:47,910 --> 00:13:51,180 This ice sheet was built layer by layer 216 00:13:51,210 --> 00:13:56,180 as snowfall accumulated over 130,000 years. 217 00:13:57,620 --> 00:14:01,660 The deeper into the ice the scientists drill, 218 00:14:01,690 --> 00:14:04,360 the farther back in time they can look. 219 00:14:07,430 --> 00:14:11,270 The samples arrive for analysis at the Desert Research Institute 220 00:14:11,300 --> 00:14:12,400 in Nevada. 221 00:14:16,070 --> 00:14:20,440 Geochemist Nelia Dunbar and glaciologist Joe McConnell 222 00:14:20,480 --> 00:14:23,940 are preparing to analyze an Arctic ice core sample 223 00:14:23,980 --> 00:14:27,350 that contains snowfall from the mid 13th century. 224 00:14:27,380 --> 00:14:30,680 The core comes from 1,000 feet below the surface 225 00:14:30,720 --> 00:14:32,490 of the ice sheet. 226 00:14:32,520 --> 00:14:35,790 They will be looking for sulphuric acid... 227 00:14:35,830 --> 00:14:37,760 Evidence of an intense eruption. 228 00:14:37,790 --> 00:14:40,590 If there were a big volcanic eruption 229 00:14:40,630 --> 00:14:41,900 that produced a lot of sulphur, 230 00:14:41,930 --> 00:14:44,730 that sulphur should be preserved in this ice. 231 00:14:44,770 --> 00:14:46,600 And that's what we're interested in studying. 232 00:14:46,640 --> 00:14:49,140 Where is this from, and what's the age of it? 233 00:14:49,170 --> 00:14:52,670 So this piece is from around 1250, 1255 AD. 234 00:14:52,710 --> 00:14:56,680 This represents about three years. 235 00:14:56,710 --> 00:14:58,280 So this is roughly one year, 236 00:14:58,310 --> 00:15:00,410 roughly one year, and roughly one year. 237 00:15:03,650 --> 00:15:05,450 These ice cores hold an incredible record 238 00:15:05,490 --> 00:15:07,150 of past climate. 239 00:15:07,190 --> 00:15:10,620 In between the snow crystals are little pockets of atmosphere 240 00:15:10,660 --> 00:15:13,330 that are little time capsules that represent 241 00:15:13,360 --> 00:15:15,000 the composition of the atmosphere 242 00:15:15,030 --> 00:15:18,030 at the time the snow fell. 243 00:15:18,070 --> 00:15:20,400 Over time, more snow will fall on the ice sheet, 244 00:15:20,440 --> 00:15:22,240 and that record is locked in. 245 00:15:24,170 --> 00:15:26,440 Up to the right and then up to the top. 246 00:15:26,480 --> 00:15:29,110 But to unlock the record, 247 00:15:29,150 --> 00:15:33,550 scientists have to destroy it inch by inch. 248 00:15:33,580 --> 00:15:36,320 Okay, so now we're ready to start the analysis. 249 00:15:36,350 --> 00:15:38,220 Okay. 250 00:15:40,120 --> 00:15:43,120 As each layer of ice melts down, 251 00:15:43,160 --> 00:15:46,560 the melt water passes through a mass spectrometer. 252 00:15:46,600 --> 00:15:49,760 It's like a time machine 253 00:15:49,800 --> 00:15:51,570 that reads out the chemicals 254 00:15:51,600 --> 00:15:54,570 that were in the atmosphere hundreds of years ago. 255 00:15:57,310 --> 00:15:59,440 The results start to come through. 256 00:16:02,580 --> 00:16:05,750 And the team immediately sees a telltale spike. 257 00:16:05,780 --> 00:16:07,920 So we're seeing the responses 258 00:16:07,950 --> 00:16:09,797 come up on all the various instruments right now. 259 00:16:09,820 --> 00:16:14,350 So this would be 1258, and you can see the acid now 260 00:16:14,390 --> 00:16:18,690 has just skyrocketed, a huge increase in sulphur. 261 00:16:18,730 --> 00:16:20,123 So it's certainly pointing to volcanism. 262 00:16:20,130 --> 00:16:22,400 Okay, so that must have been a really big volcanic event. 263 00:16:22,430 --> 00:16:24,030 Yeah, absolutely huge. 264 00:16:24,070 --> 00:16:26,530 The sulphur locked inside 265 00:16:26,570 --> 00:16:29,070 the 1258 ice layer tells the story 266 00:16:29,100 --> 00:16:31,340 of a powerful volcanic eruption. 267 00:16:33,740 --> 00:16:37,340 And though the sulphur was washed out of the atmosphere 268 00:16:37,380 --> 00:16:41,280 in rain and snow in 1258, 269 00:16:41,320 --> 00:16:45,920 the eruption itself likely occurred the year before. 270 00:16:47,620 --> 00:16:49,020 Now, keep in mind 271 00:16:49,060 --> 00:16:50,960 that it takes a while for the sulphur to make it 272 00:16:50,990 --> 00:16:52,383 from the volcano through the atmosphere 273 00:16:52,390 --> 00:16:53,760 and be deposited on the ice sheet. 274 00:16:53,800 --> 00:16:55,160 Mm-hmm. 275 00:16:55,200 --> 00:16:56,963 And so this event, it probably occurred in maybe 276 00:16:56,970 --> 00:16:57,900 mid to late 1257. 277 00:16:59,640 --> 00:17:02,470 And the amount of sulphur ejected by this eruption 278 00:17:02,500 --> 00:17:06,910 was vast by comparison with that produced 279 00:17:06,940 --> 00:17:09,310 by the other known eruptions captured in the ice cores. 280 00:17:09,350 --> 00:17:12,510 Here's the 1257 of that that we just measured again 281 00:17:12,550 --> 00:17:14,820 in this new ice core. 282 00:17:14,850 --> 00:17:16,450 We can see that it's huge. 283 00:17:16,490 --> 00:17:19,550 When you compare it to Tambora, here in 1815, it's, you know, 284 00:17:19,590 --> 00:17:22,060 something like more than twice as big. 285 00:17:22,090 --> 00:17:24,120 So this is a really, really big event. 286 00:17:24,160 --> 00:17:25,653 And at least in this composite it's the biggest event 287 00:17:25,660 --> 00:17:28,900 of the last 2,000 years, very clearly. 288 00:17:30,330 --> 00:17:33,730 So this eruption seems to have been large enough 289 00:17:33,770 --> 00:17:35,370 to account for the freak climate disaster 290 00:17:35,400 --> 00:17:38,640 across the Northern Hemisphere in 1258, 291 00:17:38,670 --> 00:17:41,280 including London's deadly famine. 292 00:17:41,310 --> 00:17:44,780 It was hard to really pin down one event and say, 293 00:17:44,810 --> 00:17:47,350 "This was the result of a volcanic eruption." 294 00:17:47,380 --> 00:17:50,380 But I think in this case the evidence is quite strong. 295 00:17:52,220 --> 00:17:54,350 You can imagine living in medieval London. 296 00:17:54,390 --> 00:17:56,390 You know that you haven't got enough food to live, 297 00:17:56,430 --> 00:18:00,190 your crops are failing, the weather's very bad, 298 00:18:00,230 --> 00:18:05,070 but you'd have no idea the true cause of what was going on. 299 00:18:09,710 --> 00:18:10,770 The true cause 300 00:18:10,810 --> 00:18:14,040 was that somewhere on the planet, in 1257, 301 00:18:14,080 --> 00:18:17,740 a volcano exploded and blasted its contents, 302 00:18:17,780 --> 00:18:21,320 including poisonous gas and ash, high into the atmosphere, 303 00:18:21,350 --> 00:18:24,890 where it dimmed the sun for months, if not years. 304 00:18:29,290 --> 00:18:32,030 But where was this killer? 305 00:18:32,060 --> 00:18:35,030 The mystery that remains is what was the volcano 306 00:18:35,060 --> 00:18:38,170 that was responsible for this big volcanic eruption? 307 00:18:40,040 --> 00:18:42,440 More than 1,500 volcanoes 308 00:18:42,470 --> 00:18:45,110 have been active in the last 10,000 years, 309 00:18:45,140 --> 00:18:48,440 so pinpointing which of these caused 310 00:18:48,480 --> 00:18:54,680 such a massive disruption in 1258 is a huge challenge. 311 00:18:54,720 --> 00:18:59,290 The first place to look is a string of volcanoes 312 00:18:59,320 --> 00:19:01,460 known as the Pacific Ring of Fire. 313 00:19:03,260 --> 00:19:05,430 The continents we live on 314 00:19:05,460 --> 00:19:10,200 ride atop giant tectonic plates made of rock. 315 00:19:10,230 --> 00:19:13,430 Where plates collide or slide under each other 316 00:19:13,470 --> 00:19:16,270 gives rise to volcanoes, 317 00:19:16,310 --> 00:19:20,210 making this one of the most geologically active regions 318 00:19:20,240 --> 00:19:22,540 of the world. 319 00:19:22,580 --> 00:19:27,480 But the Ring of Fire extends for thousands of miles. 320 00:19:27,520 --> 00:19:31,920 How can scientists work out which volcano is the culprit? 321 00:19:36,460 --> 00:19:40,190 In her lab at the New Mexico Bureau of Geology, 322 00:19:40,230 --> 00:19:43,360 Nelia Dunbar examines some distinctively shaped 323 00:19:43,400 --> 00:19:46,300 mineral particles lodged in a section of ice 324 00:19:46,340 --> 00:19:48,300 from a different Greenland ice core. 325 00:19:48,340 --> 00:19:52,410 The particles also date to 1258, 326 00:19:52,440 --> 00:19:56,140 when the sulphur concentrations are highest. 327 00:19:58,150 --> 00:20:00,480 Could these particles be possible clues 328 00:20:00,520 --> 00:20:03,620 to the volcano's identity? 329 00:20:05,190 --> 00:20:08,160 At 50,000 times magnification, 330 00:20:08,190 --> 00:20:10,260 it's clear that the mineral particles 331 00:20:10,290 --> 00:20:13,430 are actually microscopic pieces of volcanic ash. 332 00:20:13,460 --> 00:20:17,730 These particles are smaller than a human hair. 333 00:20:20,070 --> 00:20:21,440 The ash particles 334 00:20:21,470 --> 00:20:23,940 are fragments of shattered pumice, 335 00:20:23,970 --> 00:20:28,380 produced when magma cools rapidly during an eruption. 336 00:20:28,410 --> 00:20:30,210 And their chemical composition 337 00:20:30,250 --> 00:20:35,780 is unique to each volcanic eruption. 338 00:20:35,820 --> 00:20:37,920 Just like a human fingerprint allows a suspect 339 00:20:37,950 --> 00:20:41,520 to be identified, the chemical composition of an ash layer 340 00:20:41,560 --> 00:20:44,360 allows the source volcano to be identified. 341 00:20:44,390 --> 00:20:50,900 This unique signature didn't match any known volcano. 342 00:20:54,670 --> 00:20:59,240 But it did show up in one other surprising place... 343 00:21:01,780 --> 00:21:05,450 ...at the exact opposite end of the world, 344 00:21:05,480 --> 00:21:08,950 in ice cores taken from the South Pole. 345 00:21:10,850 --> 00:21:14,420 These cores also contained a significant spike 346 00:21:14,460 --> 00:21:17,120 in sulphuric acid, 347 00:21:17,160 --> 00:21:19,630 corresponding to the eruption in 1257. 348 00:21:19,660 --> 00:21:23,630 This means that the monster darkened not only 349 00:21:23,670 --> 00:21:28,670 the Northern Hemisphere, but the Southern Hemisphere as well, 350 00:21:28,700 --> 00:21:33,810 smothering the entire world in a blanket of sulphuric acid. 351 00:21:37,550 --> 00:21:39,910 Climatologist Michael Mills 352 00:21:39,950 --> 00:21:42,980 believes the size of this global cloud 353 00:21:43,020 --> 00:21:46,250 can help pinpoint the place where the volcano erupted. 354 00:21:48,460 --> 00:21:50,090 He uses satellite data 355 00:21:50,130 --> 00:21:53,360 to map how clouds of sulphuric acid aerosols 356 00:21:53,400 --> 00:21:55,200 disperse around the world. 357 00:21:57,530 --> 00:21:59,023 Let's look at what happens when you have an eruption 358 00:21:59,030 --> 00:22:01,170 in the Northern Hemisphere. 359 00:22:01,200 --> 00:22:04,640 In 2008, we had several eruptions, 360 00:22:04,670 --> 00:22:08,480 and the aerosol stays in the Northern Hemisphere. 361 00:22:08,510 --> 00:22:10,910 Now look at what happens 362 00:22:10,950 --> 00:22:13,510 when you have an eruption in the Southern Hemisphere. 363 00:22:13,550 --> 00:22:16,680 The aerosol spreads, and will remain 364 00:22:16,720 --> 00:22:19,450 in the Southern Hemisphere. 365 00:22:19,490 --> 00:22:23,160 But how could an aerosol cloud reach both hemispheres? 366 00:22:23,190 --> 00:22:28,630 For that, an eruption has to occur within a narrow band 367 00:22:28,660 --> 00:22:30,900 around the middle of the globe. 368 00:22:32,830 --> 00:22:35,840 This is Pinatubo in June of 1991, 369 00:22:35,870 --> 00:22:37,540 in the Philippines. 370 00:22:37,570 --> 00:22:40,640 It starts spreading throughout the tropics, 371 00:22:40,680 --> 00:22:43,580 and from there, it spreads 372 00:22:43,610 --> 00:22:47,910 into the Northern Hemisphere and to the Southern Hemisphere. 373 00:22:47,950 --> 00:22:50,180 Within a year after the eruption, 374 00:22:50,220 --> 00:22:53,850 the aerosol has covered the globe from pole to pole, 375 00:22:53,890 --> 00:22:55,820 affecting temperatures globally. 376 00:22:57,190 --> 00:23:00,860 The mystery eruption of 1257 377 00:23:00,900 --> 00:23:05,430 also spread a cloud of sulphuric acid over both poles. 378 00:23:05,470 --> 00:23:11,970 So it too must have erupted near the equator. 379 00:23:12,010 --> 00:23:16,480 But that still leaves over 700 possible volcanoes as suspects, 380 00:23:16,510 --> 00:23:20,710 like Mount Tambora, that led to the year without a summer, 381 00:23:20,750 --> 00:23:26,320 Krakatoa, that also erupted in Indonesia in 1883, 382 00:23:26,360 --> 00:23:31,020 and El Chichon in Mexico, that erupted in 1982. 383 00:23:31,060 --> 00:23:34,130 Any one of hundreds of tropical volcanoes 384 00:23:34,160 --> 00:23:36,100 could have caused thousands of deaths 385 00:23:36,130 --> 00:23:38,970 on the other side of the planet, but which one, 386 00:23:39,000 --> 00:23:40,800 and could it strike again? 387 00:23:40,840 --> 00:23:43,000 It's still a needle in a haystack 388 00:23:43,040 --> 00:23:46,270 to find the one volcano, the one eruption 389 00:23:46,310 --> 00:23:48,510 that triggered all of this, because there are 390 00:23:48,540 --> 00:23:51,750 so many volcanoes, even if you narrow it down to the tropics, 391 00:23:51,780 --> 00:23:53,280 where do you start? 392 00:23:55,420 --> 00:23:58,420 It seemed an impossible mystery to solve. 393 00:24:02,120 --> 00:24:03,560 But then a French geographer 394 00:24:03,590 --> 00:24:06,530 named Franck Lavigne decided to take it on. 395 00:24:08,830 --> 00:24:10,460 For me it looks 396 00:24:10,500 --> 00:24:14,200 a bit strange that nobody found this eruption. 397 00:24:14,240 --> 00:24:17,000 So I decided to take up the challenge. 398 00:24:17,040 --> 00:24:21,340 He approaches it as a detective. 399 00:24:21,380 --> 00:24:25,080 Trying to find the identity of this mystery volcano 400 00:24:25,110 --> 00:24:27,410 was like a crime scene. 401 00:24:27,450 --> 00:24:28,920 So we needed to investigate, 402 00:24:28,950 --> 00:24:31,920 to look for culprits, to look for clues. 403 00:24:31,950 --> 00:24:35,460 Volcanologist Jean-Christophe Komorowski 404 00:24:35,490 --> 00:24:38,830 joins the investigation. 405 00:24:38,860 --> 00:24:40,560 It's a very large eruption. 406 00:24:40,600 --> 00:24:43,460 It's an unknown eruption, so it has to be in a country 407 00:24:43,500 --> 00:24:46,770 where there are many, many volcanoes, 408 00:24:46,800 --> 00:24:49,300 most of them perhaps have not been studied. 409 00:24:49,340 --> 00:24:53,010 The team focuses on one particularly active region 410 00:24:53,040 --> 00:24:55,540 of the Pacific Ring of Fire... 411 00:24:55,580 --> 00:25:00,710 Indonesia, home of the once deadly Mount Tambora, 412 00:25:00,750 --> 00:25:04,280 that last erupted in 1815. 413 00:25:04,320 --> 00:25:08,460 With 129 active volcanoes spread over 3,000 miles, 414 00:25:08,490 --> 00:25:14,230 Indonesia is the most volcanic country in the tropics. 415 00:25:14,260 --> 00:25:19,570 It is also one of the most unstudied and mysterious. 416 00:25:19,600 --> 00:25:21,230 Indonesia has 417 00:25:21,270 --> 00:25:23,501 the second largest number of active volcanoes in the world. 418 00:25:23,540 --> 00:25:27,770 Indonesia marks the place 419 00:25:27,810 --> 00:25:31,510 where two giant tectonic plates collide. 420 00:25:31,550 --> 00:25:34,810 Here, one plate dives under the other 421 00:25:34,850 --> 00:25:37,550 in a process called subduction. 422 00:25:37,590 --> 00:25:40,990 At depth, the diving plate releases water, 423 00:25:41,020 --> 00:25:44,820 which lowers the melting point of the hot rock above. 424 00:25:44,860 --> 00:25:49,660 The rock melts, forming giant bubbles of magma that rise up, 425 00:25:49,700 --> 00:25:52,300 forcing their way through the Earth's crust, 426 00:25:52,330 --> 00:25:55,870 until the magma erupts at the surface. 427 00:26:00,440 --> 00:26:03,580 Today, the most dangerous Indonesian volcano 428 00:26:03,610 --> 00:26:06,550 is Mount Merapi on the island of Java. 429 00:26:06,580 --> 00:26:12,120 This volcano erupts explosively every few years... 430 00:26:16,220 --> 00:26:18,220 ...threatening hundreds of thousands of people 431 00:26:18,260 --> 00:26:19,530 who live in its shadow. 432 00:26:24,430 --> 00:26:27,400 Merapi volcano is considered 433 00:26:27,440 --> 00:26:29,970 to be one of the most active volcanoes in the world. 434 00:26:33,210 --> 00:26:38,380 The last major eruption was in 2010. 435 00:26:38,410 --> 00:26:41,610 400,000 people evacuated. 436 00:26:41,650 --> 00:26:45,950 Even so, more than 200 died in the avalanches 437 00:26:45,990 --> 00:26:47,750 of superheated ash and rock, 438 00:26:47,790 --> 00:26:52,360 called pyroclastic flows. 439 00:26:52,390 --> 00:26:56,960 20,000 were left without homes. 440 00:27:01,600 --> 00:27:04,000 The ash produced by Merapi 441 00:27:04,040 --> 00:27:05,710 does not match the chemical fingerprint 442 00:27:05,740 --> 00:27:08,410 of the ash in the ice cores. 443 00:27:08,440 --> 00:27:11,950 But understanding the forces that make this volcano 444 00:27:11,980 --> 00:27:17,520 so dangerous sheds light on all of Indonesia's active volcanoes. 445 00:27:17,550 --> 00:27:23,860 So which one exploded so catastrophically in 1257? 446 00:27:23,890 --> 00:27:26,760 Geographer Lavigne 447 00:27:26,800 --> 00:27:30,530 hunts through satellite images for large volcanic craters 448 00:27:30,570 --> 00:27:34,830 and other telltale signs. 449 00:27:34,870 --> 00:27:36,533 And one of these clues is a large volume of pumice 450 00:27:36,540 --> 00:27:38,840 all around the volcano. 451 00:27:38,870 --> 00:27:43,840 Pumice, a rough textured rock, is solidified magma, 452 00:27:43,880 --> 00:27:48,250 blasted out during explosive eruptions. 453 00:27:51,150 --> 00:27:53,750 When you suddenly depressurize 454 00:27:53,790 --> 00:27:56,990 and cool magma that was very rich in gas, 455 00:27:57,030 --> 00:27:58,630 it forms this very lightweight, 456 00:27:58,660 --> 00:28:01,590 foamy rock, which is pumice. 457 00:28:01,630 --> 00:28:07,100 It can be a deadly material. 458 00:28:07,140 --> 00:28:12,040 When Mount Vesuvius erupted in Italy in 79 the Common Era, 459 00:28:12,070 --> 00:28:15,910 it entombed the town and the people of Pompeii 460 00:28:15,940 --> 00:28:19,780 in layers of pumice 16 feet deep. 461 00:28:19,810 --> 00:28:25,550 Throughout Indonesia today, pumice mines dig out 462 00:28:25,590 --> 00:28:27,720 this volcanic material, primarily for use 463 00:28:27,760 --> 00:28:29,560 in the construction industry. 464 00:28:29,590 --> 00:28:34,590 And the scars left by the quarrying work are so extensive 465 00:28:34,630 --> 00:28:38,530 that they're visible from space, making it easy for scientists 466 00:28:38,570 --> 00:28:42,200 to pinpoint locations for further investigation. 467 00:28:42,240 --> 00:28:45,270 Journeying to Indonesia, 468 00:28:45,310 --> 00:28:47,870 Lavigne works with partners from the government's 469 00:28:47,910 --> 00:28:51,380 geological agency and Indonesian universities. 470 00:28:51,410 --> 00:28:57,080 They visit several volcanoes, with no success. 471 00:28:57,120 --> 00:29:00,820 At each site, the pumice is compacted and hard, 472 00:29:00,860 --> 00:29:03,220 likely too ancient to have been created 473 00:29:03,260 --> 00:29:06,790 during the 1257 eruption. 474 00:29:06,830 --> 00:29:08,490 It seemed older 475 00:29:08,530 --> 00:29:13,170 than we had predicted, so older than the 13th century. 476 00:29:15,270 --> 00:29:18,500 Then the team sees something intriguing 477 00:29:18,540 --> 00:29:21,570 in the satellite images, and decides to narrow its search 478 00:29:21,610 --> 00:29:24,640 to the island of Lombok, just east of Bali. 479 00:29:26,750 --> 00:29:29,150 This island is quite a big island, 480 00:29:29,180 --> 00:29:31,990 with a very big crater. 481 00:29:37,330 --> 00:29:40,130 Stretching four miles across 482 00:29:40,160 --> 00:29:42,960 and over two and a half thousand feet deep, 483 00:29:43,000 --> 00:29:46,070 this giant crater is called a caldera. 484 00:29:46,100 --> 00:29:51,300 It's what remains of a volcanic system known as Mount Rinjani. 485 00:29:51,340 --> 00:29:54,940 When you have a very large explosive eruption, 486 00:29:54,980 --> 00:29:58,610 you're left at the end of the eruption with a huge hole. 487 00:29:58,650 --> 00:30:02,450 To the team's expert eyes, it looks like there were 488 00:30:02,480 --> 00:30:08,220 not one, but two giant volcanic peaks here in the past... 489 00:30:08,260 --> 00:30:13,430 Mount Rinjani itself, and a second peak that once rose 490 00:30:13,460 --> 00:30:16,000 above the main part of the caldera. 491 00:30:16,030 --> 00:30:21,130 Today, inside this caldera is now a small volcanic cone... 492 00:30:21,170 --> 00:30:22,840 Mount Barujari. 493 00:30:24,310 --> 00:30:27,610 Surrounded by a rainwater lake, 494 00:30:27,640 --> 00:30:30,210 Mount Barujari is the part of the volcanic system 495 00:30:30,250 --> 00:30:31,840 that is still active. 496 00:30:39,890 --> 00:30:42,720 In 2015 and 2016, 497 00:30:42,760 --> 00:30:45,790 this small cone erupted with enough force 498 00:30:45,830 --> 00:30:50,030 to send plumes of ash thousands of feet into the atmosphere, 499 00:30:50,070 --> 00:30:53,000 disrupting international flights in the area. 500 00:30:55,240 --> 00:31:02,880 It's far too small to be the source of the mystery eruption, 501 00:31:02,910 --> 00:31:06,450 but the caldera it sits in is large enough 502 00:31:06,480 --> 00:31:09,720 to have been created during a much more powerful eruption. 503 00:31:14,420 --> 00:31:17,660 And all around the Mount Rinjani volcanic system 504 00:31:17,690 --> 00:31:20,530 are pumice quarries. 505 00:31:20,560 --> 00:31:22,560 Everywhere in the island 506 00:31:22,600 --> 00:31:26,330 you can find a pumice quarry. 507 00:31:26,370 --> 00:31:28,800 Could the pumice in these quarries be dated 508 00:31:28,840 --> 00:31:30,900 to help in their investigation? 509 00:31:35,480 --> 00:31:39,850 The team travels to Lombok. 510 00:31:42,820 --> 00:31:46,520 And the hunt starts in the shadow of Mount Rinjani... 511 00:31:50,430 --> 00:31:55,500 ...a peak that soars 12,000 feet high. 512 00:32:01,300 --> 00:32:04,200 On the island, they join forces with more Indonesian experts. 513 00:32:09,380 --> 00:32:11,140 They head for the quarries 514 00:32:11,180 --> 00:32:15,780 identified in the satellite images. 515 00:32:19,220 --> 00:32:23,860 And as soon as they arrive, they discover something remarkable. 516 00:32:23,890 --> 00:32:30,730 The volcanic pumice deposits are at least 120 feet deep. 517 00:32:37,370 --> 00:32:41,470 Here we are, looking at the huge volcanic deposit. 518 00:32:41,510 --> 00:32:46,880 And that's very rare, to find so thick deposit 519 00:32:46,920 --> 00:32:51,480 very far away from the summit of the volcano. 520 00:32:51,520 --> 00:32:55,560 Pompeii, just over five miles 521 00:32:55,590 --> 00:32:57,790 from the erupting Mount Vesuvius, was buried 522 00:32:57,830 --> 00:33:00,130 under 16 feet of pumice. 523 00:33:00,160 --> 00:33:05,570 Here, the deposits of pumice and ash are at least 524 00:33:05,600 --> 00:33:08,940 six times thicker, and they are much farther away 525 00:33:08,970 --> 00:33:13,870 from Mount Rinjani than Pompeii was from Mount Vesuvius. 526 00:33:13,910 --> 00:33:18,180 It's a sign of a giant eruption. 527 00:33:18,210 --> 00:33:21,080 You're dealing with a very massive eruption. 528 00:33:21,120 --> 00:33:22,850 Much larger than the Pompeii eruption, 529 00:33:22,880 --> 00:33:26,090 and probably also much larger than the Pinatubo eruption 530 00:33:26,120 --> 00:33:27,250 in 1991. 531 00:33:31,930 --> 00:33:35,060 And it looks to them as though the ash and pumice 532 00:33:35,100 --> 00:33:39,830 flowed down from the volcano in vast avalanches. 533 00:33:43,270 --> 00:33:45,670 You can see it's very rich in finer material. 534 00:33:45,710 --> 00:33:48,980 It's not pumice falling from a column, raining down. 535 00:33:49,010 --> 00:33:51,610 It's an avalanche of incandescent, 536 00:33:51,650 --> 00:33:53,450 hot volcanic rocks mixed with gases. 537 00:33:56,620 --> 00:33:57,680 My first impression, 538 00:33:57,720 --> 00:33:59,950 when I saw such a huge deposit, 539 00:33:59,990 --> 00:34:02,760 was that we have here a very serious candidate 540 00:34:02,790 --> 00:34:03,860 for the mystery eruption. 541 00:34:09,100 --> 00:34:10,430 But is all this pumice 542 00:34:10,470 --> 00:34:16,100 from the mystery eruption of 1257? 543 00:34:16,140 --> 00:34:19,670 To confirm that this eruption is the 1257 eruption, 544 00:34:19,710 --> 00:34:24,210 we need to try to find charcoal, wood logs that were burned 545 00:34:24,250 --> 00:34:27,710 by this eruption, carried by the pyroclastic flow, 546 00:34:27,750 --> 00:34:30,280 and settling here, and we need to date those. 547 00:34:32,550 --> 00:34:36,460 If they can find burned wood, they can radiocarbon-date it, 548 00:34:36,490 --> 00:34:39,990 since, unlike pumice, wood contains carbon 549 00:34:40,030 --> 00:34:42,030 absorbed from the atmosphere. 550 00:34:42,060 --> 00:34:44,630 And by taking samples of the pumice itself, 551 00:34:44,670 --> 00:34:48,400 the team hopes to compare its chemistry 552 00:34:48,440 --> 00:34:53,170 with the fragments of volcanic ash from the polar ice cores. 553 00:34:55,740 --> 00:34:59,310 But Lavigne still needs more evidence, so he decides 554 00:34:59,350 --> 00:35:01,180 to investigate Lombok's past 555 00:35:01,220 --> 00:35:06,090 to see if he can find records of historic eruptions. 556 00:35:11,060 --> 00:35:12,590 Under lock and key in the museum 557 00:35:12,630 --> 00:35:15,030 of Lombok's capital city, Mataram, 558 00:35:15,060 --> 00:35:20,670 is an original text, written on dried palm leaves, 559 00:35:20,700 --> 00:35:23,340 in an old Javanese script. 560 00:35:27,340 --> 00:35:30,780 Called the Babad Lombok, 561 00:35:30,810 --> 00:35:35,750 this text is a rare account of Lombok's history. 562 00:35:35,780 --> 00:35:37,750 It chronicles the story 563 00:35:37,790 --> 00:35:41,450 of Lombok, from prehistoric times to historic times. 564 00:35:41,490 --> 00:35:45,260 And hidden in this document 565 00:35:45,290 --> 00:35:48,060 is a remarkable account that historians have dated 566 00:35:48,100 --> 00:35:50,200 to the 13th century. 567 00:35:51,400 --> 00:35:54,200 Mount Rinjani avalanched, 568 00:35:54,240 --> 00:35:57,070 and Mount Samalas collapsed. 569 00:35:57,110 --> 00:35:59,610 Rocks flooded down in rows. 570 00:36:03,440 --> 00:36:06,150 It describes a huge volcanic eruption 571 00:36:06,180 --> 00:36:07,810 that occurred in Lombok. 572 00:36:09,550 --> 00:36:11,880 Lavigne is familiar with Mount Rinjani, 573 00:36:11,920 --> 00:36:17,760 mentioned in the text, but not the name of the volcano 574 00:36:17,790 --> 00:36:22,190 that's described as collapsing... Mount Samalas. 575 00:36:22,230 --> 00:36:24,600 This description is absolutely fantastic, 576 00:36:24,630 --> 00:36:29,870 because it mentions the name of a new volcano, Mount Samalas. 577 00:36:29,900 --> 00:36:32,100 I never heard about this before. 578 00:36:33,570 --> 00:36:37,280 This remarkable discovery raises a new question... 579 00:36:37,310 --> 00:36:42,680 Could the giant caldera the team saw on satellite images 580 00:36:42,720 --> 00:36:46,320 belong to the unknown Mount Samalas? 581 00:36:46,350 --> 00:36:52,830 The text also reveals the scale of the human catastrophe. 582 00:36:52,860 --> 00:36:54,590 The text in the Babad 583 00:36:54,630 --> 00:36:59,060 says these flows destroyed the seat of the kingdom, Pamatan. 584 00:36:59,100 --> 00:37:02,700 All houses were destroyed and swept away, 585 00:37:02,740 --> 00:37:05,600 floating on the sea, and many people die. 586 00:37:05,640 --> 00:37:08,710 There is a strong possibility of the remains of this capital 587 00:37:08,740 --> 00:37:13,780 still lie preserved beneath the pumice, just like Pompeii. 588 00:37:13,820 --> 00:37:16,520 The text is a tantalizing clue, 589 00:37:16,550 --> 00:37:20,990 but could it just be a myth? 590 00:37:21,020 --> 00:37:25,360 It made this volcano our chief suspect in our investigations, 591 00:37:25,390 --> 00:37:29,960 but to confirm it was the one, we needed scientific proof. 592 00:37:34,070 --> 00:37:36,770 So the team decides to mount an expedition. 593 00:37:41,780 --> 00:37:45,780 To trek into the mountains and hunt for hard evidence 594 00:37:45,810 --> 00:37:50,650 at an altitude of 9,000 feet. 595 00:37:59,890 --> 00:38:03,500 From up here, the team can assess the landscape and geology 596 00:38:03,530 --> 00:38:06,270 in a way that's impossible from satellite images alone. 597 00:38:14,910 --> 00:38:18,040 Exposed in the cliffs are geological layers 598 00:38:18,080 --> 00:38:19,980 that allow Jean-Christophe Komorowski 599 00:38:20,010 --> 00:38:23,580 to work out the sequence of events that led 600 00:38:23,620 --> 00:38:25,020 to what we see today... 601 00:38:27,620 --> 00:38:29,320 ...the giant caldera. 602 00:38:31,790 --> 00:38:34,960 These cliffs are the remains of a very massive volcano. 603 00:38:37,600 --> 00:38:40,230 And towering over the east side, 604 00:38:40,270 --> 00:38:46,410 the remains of Mount Rinjani. 605 00:38:46,440 --> 00:38:47,510 You can see the slopes 606 00:38:47,540 --> 00:38:51,880 of Mount Rinjani volcano rising to 3,700 meters. 607 00:38:51,910 --> 00:38:54,350 And it was much higher before. 608 00:38:54,380 --> 00:38:56,450 The scars in the cliffs 609 00:38:56,480 --> 00:38:59,620 suggest to Komorowski that half of Mount Rinjani 610 00:38:59,650 --> 00:39:03,420 avalanched into the caldera after it formed. 611 00:39:03,460 --> 00:39:06,560 The formation of the Samalas caldera 612 00:39:06,590 --> 00:39:08,160 destabilized Mount Rinjani, 613 00:39:08,200 --> 00:39:11,030 which collapsed into the caldera, 614 00:39:11,070 --> 00:39:13,830 and this formed this massive sheer cliff here. 615 00:39:16,740 --> 00:39:20,740 To the experts, it looks like Mount Samalas once stood 616 00:39:20,780 --> 00:39:22,270 next to Mount Rinjani, 617 00:39:22,310 --> 00:39:30,080 just as the ancient text describes. 618 00:39:30,120 --> 00:39:32,820 In fact, the latest research found that there was 619 00:39:32,850 --> 00:39:34,750 a volcanic mountain called Mount Samalas, 620 00:39:34,790 --> 00:39:38,790 which in the end is different than Mount Rinjani. 621 00:39:43,330 --> 00:39:46,500 By extending the existing slopes of the volcano, 622 00:39:46,530 --> 00:39:50,740 experts have reconstructed what Mount Samalas looked like. 623 00:39:54,910 --> 00:39:56,840 Imagine that, before the eruption 624 00:39:56,880 --> 00:39:58,740 you had a huge conical volcano 625 00:39:58,780 --> 00:40:03,080 rising 1.6 kilometer above the rim of this giant hole. 626 00:40:03,120 --> 00:40:08,250 That's an extra mile in height of volcanic mountain. 627 00:40:08,290 --> 00:40:11,490 So how did several cubic miles of rock disappear 628 00:40:11,530 --> 00:40:14,690 and leave an enormous caldera in its place? 629 00:40:14,730 --> 00:40:19,130 It all begins with a giant eruption. 630 00:40:19,170 --> 00:40:20,570 And in order to form a caldera, 631 00:40:20,600 --> 00:40:23,800 you have to have first a very massive explosive eruption. 632 00:40:26,110 --> 00:40:27,670 In a magma chamber 633 00:40:27,710 --> 00:40:30,680 far beneath the volcano, the pressure rises, 634 00:40:30,710 --> 00:40:33,780 and finally cracks open the rock above. 635 00:40:33,810 --> 00:40:36,820 Magma blasts upwards. 636 00:40:36,850 --> 00:40:41,920 As this chamber empties, it becomes unstable. 637 00:40:41,960 --> 00:40:44,760 This destabilizes the whole volcano on top. 638 00:40:46,360 --> 00:40:48,990 The roof of this partially empty chamber 639 00:40:49,030 --> 00:40:52,560 now cracks under the weight. 640 00:40:52,600 --> 00:40:54,000 And it collapses. 641 00:40:54,040 --> 00:40:58,370 The entire top of the volcano caves in. 642 00:41:01,880 --> 00:41:05,340 Billions of tons of rock disappear as it falls 643 00:41:05,380 --> 00:41:09,480 thousands of feet down into the magma chamber below, 644 00:41:09,520 --> 00:41:11,520 forming a giant crater above... 645 00:41:14,190 --> 00:41:17,120 ...the enormous caldera. 646 00:41:18,430 --> 00:41:22,090 But that's not the end. 647 00:41:22,130 --> 00:41:24,060 As the volcano collapses on itself, 648 00:41:24,100 --> 00:41:26,430 it forms a massive explosive eruption, 649 00:41:26,470 --> 00:41:28,500 producing giant pyroclastic flows 650 00:41:28,540 --> 00:41:30,670 that sweep down the flanks of the volcano. 651 00:41:36,380 --> 00:41:38,510 This catastrophic event 652 00:41:38,550 --> 00:41:40,680 explains the depth of the pumice deposits 653 00:41:40,720 --> 00:41:42,110 in the quarries, 654 00:41:42,150 --> 00:41:44,480 and closely aligns with the ancient story 655 00:41:44,520 --> 00:41:46,520 in the Babad Lombok. 656 00:41:48,290 --> 00:41:51,760 It gives a name to the volcano that existed 657 00:41:51,790 --> 00:41:53,990 at the beginning of the eruption, Mount Samalas, 658 00:41:54,030 --> 00:41:59,400 and it describes how Mount Samalas collapsed in on itself. 659 00:41:59,430 --> 00:42:02,530 Altogether, the description in the Babad matches remarkably 660 00:42:02,570 --> 00:42:04,740 what we have found in our field investigations. 661 00:42:06,840 --> 00:42:10,880 We now know that Babad was not a legend, 662 00:42:10,910 --> 00:42:12,340 but eyewitness accounts. 663 00:42:16,350 --> 00:42:18,720 If the long-forgotten Mount Samalas 664 00:42:18,750 --> 00:42:20,720 was the source of the giant eruption on Lombok, 665 00:42:20,760 --> 00:42:24,560 as the evidence suggests, could it also be 666 00:42:24,590 --> 00:42:28,190 the mystery eruption of 1257? 667 00:42:30,530 --> 00:42:32,460 To answer that definitively, 668 00:42:32,500 --> 00:42:37,840 the team still needs more forensic evidence. 669 00:42:37,870 --> 00:42:40,410 It's really critical to get on the ground 670 00:42:40,440 --> 00:42:41,902 to look at the actual rocks themselves. 671 00:42:46,710 --> 00:42:48,150 They take samples 672 00:42:48,180 --> 00:42:52,220 of pumice and ash from over 100 different sites 673 00:42:52,250 --> 00:42:53,890 across Lombok and on neighboring islands. 674 00:42:56,020 --> 00:42:58,260 They conduct geophysical surveys 675 00:42:58,290 --> 00:43:01,330 to measure the depth of the volcanic deposits 676 00:43:01,360 --> 00:43:03,860 still buried beneath the ground. 677 00:43:03,900 --> 00:43:05,900 And they investigate whether 678 00:43:05,930 --> 00:43:09,130 gases from this eruption could have reached high enough 679 00:43:09,170 --> 00:43:11,970 into the upper atmosphere to spread globally. 680 00:43:14,580 --> 00:43:16,540 To assess the scale of the eruption, 681 00:43:16,580 --> 00:43:18,740 we looked at these pumice fragments 682 00:43:18,780 --> 00:43:20,880 that were ejected by the eruption column. 683 00:43:24,120 --> 00:43:25,980 And the idea is that the further away 684 00:43:26,020 --> 00:43:28,720 you find big fragments, it means that these fragments 685 00:43:28,760 --> 00:43:30,520 were ejected with a lot of energy... 686 00:43:33,830 --> 00:43:34,893 ...and that the eruption column 687 00:43:34,900 --> 00:43:36,960 reached very high in the atmosphere. 688 00:43:39,830 --> 00:43:43,670 In this case, pumice fragments two inches across 689 00:43:43,700 --> 00:43:48,310 were found 29 miles away on the nearby island of Sumbawa, 690 00:43:48,340 --> 00:43:52,480 allowing the team to calculate that the pumice likely ascended 691 00:43:52,510 --> 00:43:58,420 nearly 27 miles high... More than ten miles higher 692 00:43:58,450 --> 00:44:00,720 than the Mount St. Helens eruption of 1980. 693 00:44:02,890 --> 00:44:05,320 This is one of the highest column heights 694 00:44:05,360 --> 00:44:08,190 for explosive eruptions in the last 10,000 years. 695 00:44:09,560 --> 00:44:11,860 The Mount Samalas eruption 696 00:44:11,900 --> 00:44:15,770 was certainly massive enough to cool the entire world. 697 00:44:18,670 --> 00:44:21,910 But can scientific tests prove that the pumice 698 00:44:21,940 --> 00:44:24,940 was from the mystery 1257 eruption? 699 00:44:28,050 --> 00:44:32,780 In Paris, French volcanologist Celine Vidal goes through 700 00:44:32,820 --> 00:44:35,150 the samples taken from Indonesia. 701 00:44:39,030 --> 00:44:41,130 First, she selects pieces of carbonized wood 702 00:44:41,160 --> 00:44:47,130 found inside the pumice deposits for radiocarbon dating. 703 00:44:47,170 --> 00:44:50,100 We analyzed 20 pieces of carbonized wood 704 00:44:50,140 --> 00:44:51,500 from sites all across the volcano, 705 00:44:51,540 --> 00:44:55,270 and the carbon 14 dating told us that the eruption 706 00:44:55,310 --> 00:44:57,140 dated to the second half of the 13th century. 707 00:44:59,010 --> 00:45:00,980 All the results were consistent 708 00:45:01,020 --> 00:45:03,720 with the mystery eruption. 709 00:45:03,750 --> 00:45:07,550 The dates are in range, 710 00:45:07,590 --> 00:45:09,550 but there is one final test. 711 00:45:09,590 --> 00:45:11,660 Will the chemical fingerprint of this eruption 712 00:45:11,690 --> 00:45:15,790 match the fingerprint in the polar ice cores? 713 00:45:19,270 --> 00:45:21,370 At high magnification, 714 00:45:21,400 --> 00:45:24,340 Vidal compares the volcanic ash fragments, 715 00:45:24,370 --> 00:45:28,210 one from the Antarctic ice core from 1257, 716 00:45:28,240 --> 00:45:35,110 and one from the pumice deposits on Lombok. 717 00:45:35,150 --> 00:45:36,720 You can see that the surfaces 718 00:45:36,750 --> 00:45:38,150 of the two different particles of ash 719 00:45:38,190 --> 00:45:42,420 have the same texture, and that their edges are very sharp. 720 00:45:42,460 --> 00:45:46,220 They appear very similar. 721 00:45:46,260 --> 00:45:50,400 But how closely do their chemical fingerprints match? 722 00:45:50,430 --> 00:45:52,700 I add now the chemical composition of the ash 723 00:45:52,730 --> 00:45:56,230 from Samalas here in blue, 724 00:45:56,270 --> 00:46:01,110 and one sees that the peaks correspond perfectly. 725 00:46:01,140 --> 00:46:02,770 They are comparable to more than 99%, 726 00:46:02,810 --> 00:46:05,310 and that is really excellent. 727 00:46:05,350 --> 00:46:09,380 This allows us to conclude that they are from the same origin. 728 00:46:09,420 --> 00:46:14,120 Now there is finally enough evidence to remove all doubt... 729 00:46:14,150 --> 00:46:18,460 The mystery killer volcano is here on Lombok, 730 00:46:18,490 --> 00:46:22,890 Mount Samalas, once known and since forgotten. 731 00:46:22,930 --> 00:46:25,500 The team was very excited by the result. 732 00:46:25,530 --> 00:46:30,740 The source of the 1257 eruption has been a mystery for 30 years, 733 00:46:30,770 --> 00:46:34,510 so we were quite excited when we were able to prove 734 00:46:34,540 --> 00:46:38,380 that Mount Samalas erupted in 1257. 735 00:46:38,410 --> 00:46:42,750 The mystery of the massive spike of sulphuric acid 736 00:46:42,780 --> 00:46:45,520 in the polar ice cores, the global volcanic winter 737 00:46:45,550 --> 00:46:48,990 caused by a cloud of aerosols that blocked the sun, 738 00:46:49,020 --> 00:46:53,230 and likely, the thousands of people killed in London 739 00:46:53,260 --> 00:46:58,030 in a catastrophic famine, all have been answered. 740 00:46:58,070 --> 00:46:59,970 By combining these discoveries 741 00:47:00,000 --> 00:47:02,630 with the investigation on the volcano, 742 00:47:02,670 --> 00:47:08,740 the team can now unpack the eruption blow by blow. 743 00:47:08,780 --> 00:47:12,710 The 1257 eruption started with a very explosive, 744 00:47:12,750 --> 00:47:16,980 violent eruption from Mount Samalas. 745 00:47:17,020 --> 00:47:19,520 At its peak, the eruption blasted out 746 00:47:19,550 --> 00:47:24,520 one million tons of material a second. 747 00:47:24,560 --> 00:47:26,890 And that produced a very tall eruption column 748 00:47:26,930 --> 00:47:29,830 of ash and gases and pumice, 749 00:47:29,860 --> 00:47:33,070 rising 43 kilometers in elevation. 750 00:47:33,100 --> 00:47:36,740 Nearly four cubic miles of pumice and ash 751 00:47:36,770 --> 00:47:40,710 rise four times higher than the operational altitude 752 00:47:40,740 --> 00:47:42,710 of a passenger jet. 753 00:47:42,740 --> 00:47:46,780 While the gases remain aloft, most of the pumice and ash 754 00:47:46,810 --> 00:47:49,210 then falls back to Earth. 755 00:47:49,250 --> 00:47:54,650 And it produced a rain of pumice over a very vast area. 756 00:47:54,690 --> 00:48:00,160 It covers an area at least 450 miles across. 757 00:48:00,190 --> 00:48:04,500 During the final collapse of the volcano, 758 00:48:04,530 --> 00:48:06,830 six cubic miles of pumice and ash 759 00:48:06,870 --> 00:48:09,800 form giant pyroclastic flows. 760 00:48:09,840 --> 00:48:15,470 Racing down, they reach speeds of over 125 miles an hour, 761 00:48:15,510 --> 00:48:20,880 at temperatures of 1,500 degrees Fahrenheit. 762 00:48:20,910 --> 00:48:22,710 They covered the entire landscape of Lombok 763 00:48:22,750 --> 00:48:25,150 with thicknesses of five to 50 meters, 764 00:48:25,190 --> 00:48:28,520 reaching the sea in many places. 765 00:48:30,160 --> 00:48:34,560 But even as the dust settles on Lombok, 766 00:48:34,600 --> 00:48:40,630 the vast volcanic cloud starts to envelop the entire world, 767 00:48:40,670 --> 00:48:43,340 even as far away from the eruption 768 00:48:43,370 --> 00:48:46,510 as North America and Europe. 769 00:48:46,540 --> 00:48:50,040 The fact that we have so many thousands of people 770 00:48:50,080 --> 00:48:53,480 buried in these mass pits as a result 771 00:48:53,510 --> 00:48:55,010 of this volcanic eruption 772 00:48:55,050 --> 00:48:58,280 just shows us what a global event it was. 773 00:49:02,820 --> 00:49:06,190 This was possibly the most massive volcanic eruption 774 00:49:06,230 --> 00:49:08,230 in recorded history. 775 00:49:10,030 --> 00:49:12,260 And it raises a troubling question. 776 00:49:12,300 --> 00:49:17,140 Could another eruption of this magnitude happen again? 777 00:49:17,170 --> 00:49:25,170 It's been 750 years since the giant eruption of Mount Samalas, 778 00:49:25,510 --> 00:49:28,880 yet inside its vast caldera, eruptions from Mount Barujari 779 00:49:28,920 --> 00:49:34,220 reveal that the volcanic system is still active. 780 00:49:38,990 --> 00:49:41,630 Two and a half thousand feet below the caldera rim, 781 00:49:41,660 --> 00:49:47,230 Komorowski rejoins the team of Indonesian volcanologists, 782 00:49:47,270 --> 00:49:50,000 monitoring the active heart 783 00:49:50,040 --> 00:49:52,500 of the Samalas/Rinjani volcanic complex. 784 00:50:05,120 --> 00:50:09,920 Using thermal imagery and making a risky trek 785 00:50:09,960 --> 00:50:11,860 to collect lava from the latest eruptions, 786 00:50:11,890 --> 00:50:14,460 the Indonesian volcanologists 787 00:50:14,490 --> 00:50:17,500 are gaining an ever more accurate picture 788 00:50:17,530 --> 00:50:22,070 of the volcano's activity level today. 789 00:50:22,100 --> 00:50:25,470 And the most telling clue to the volcano's activity 790 00:50:25,510 --> 00:50:27,040 is not the cone itself, 791 00:50:27,070 --> 00:50:31,210 but the rainwater lake that surrounds it. 792 00:50:35,120 --> 00:50:38,080 Volcanologist Devy Kamil Syahbana 793 00:50:38,120 --> 00:50:40,590 measures the water temperature. 794 00:50:42,590 --> 00:50:47,630 At an altitude 6,500 feet, more than a mile high, 795 00:50:47,660 --> 00:50:50,230 this lake should have a temperature 796 00:50:50,260 --> 00:50:53,830 of about 60 degrees Fahrenheit, or 15 degrees Celsius. 797 00:50:53,870 --> 00:50:57,540 But here we have, like, 20 to 22 degrees Celsius, 798 00:50:57,570 --> 00:51:00,140 which is much hotter than a normal lake, 799 00:51:00,170 --> 00:51:03,440 which indicates a very strong magmatic activity 800 00:51:03,480 --> 00:51:06,140 beneath the caldera. 801 00:51:06,180 --> 00:51:09,310 The eruption of 1257 802 00:51:09,350 --> 00:51:13,550 likely left a lot of magma behind, inside this chamber. 803 00:51:13,590 --> 00:51:15,950 The volcano is still under pressure, 804 00:51:15,990 --> 00:51:18,220 and it is still unstable. 805 00:51:18,260 --> 00:51:20,260 The volcano remains active, 806 00:51:20,290 --> 00:51:21,830 but their analysis tells them 807 00:51:21,860 --> 00:51:24,360 that there is insufficient pressure 808 00:51:24,400 --> 00:51:28,370 to power a 1257-scale eruption. 809 00:51:28,400 --> 00:51:32,500 But what about other volcanoes? 810 00:51:32,540 --> 00:51:37,680 According to the ice core record, there have been at least 811 00:51:37,710 --> 00:51:40,510 seven explosive eruptions on the scale of Pinatubo 812 00:51:40,550 --> 00:51:44,180 near the equator since 1257. 813 00:51:44,220 --> 00:51:46,620 It will happen again. 814 00:51:46,650 --> 00:51:49,850 The worry is, no one knows when. 815 00:51:49,890 --> 00:51:53,630 If another major explosive eruption were to happen 816 00:51:53,660 --> 00:51:55,360 today in the equatorial region, 817 00:51:55,400 --> 00:51:57,530 it would have devastating consequences. 818 00:51:59,600 --> 00:52:03,000 There'll be huge disruption to global aviation. 819 00:52:03,040 --> 00:52:05,740 The economic impact would be really catastrophic. 820 00:52:08,110 --> 00:52:09,570 These massive volcanic events 821 00:52:09,610 --> 00:52:12,910 really impact on people globally. 822 00:52:12,950 --> 00:52:14,310 It affects their climate, 823 00:52:14,350 --> 00:52:16,280 food source, causes famine, 824 00:52:16,320 --> 00:52:20,220 and can cause catastrophic numbers of deaths. 825 00:52:21,760 --> 00:52:24,590 750 years ago, 826 00:52:24,620 --> 00:52:28,630 an eruption on a small island in Indonesia 827 00:52:28,660 --> 00:52:31,630 destroyed lives on the other side of the world, 828 00:52:31,670 --> 00:52:39,300 reminding us again of the power of our volatile Earth. 829 00:52:51,050 --> 00:52:53,720 This NOVA program is available on DVD. 830 00:52:53,750 --> 00:52:59,120 To order, visit shopPBS.org, or call 1-800-PLAY-PBS. 831 00:52:59,160 --> 00:53:01,290 NOVA is also available for download on iTunes. 832 00:53:02,305 --> 00:53:08,727 Support us and become VIP member to remove all ads from www.OpenSubtitles.org 67045

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