Hit-or-myth? Linking a 1259 AD acid spike with an Okataina eruption.
Lowe, David J. ; Higham, Thomas F.G.
Introduction: Bronze Age catastrophes and myth-making
In their recent provocative paper, Buckland et al. (1997) examined
evidence for two Bronze Age 'catastrophes'. The first, the
destruction of Bronze Age Thera (Santorini) by a cataclysmic volcanic
eruption, was described as 'real and in need of a calendar
date' (p. 581). The second, the apparent collapse of Middle Bronze
Age settlement in upland Britain, was considered as a speculative event
'hypothesized on archaeological grounds and dated by a tenuous link
through tree rings to an Icelandic volcano' (p. 581). The
fundamental purpose of their critique was to demonstrate that great
caution is required in the interpretation of interdisciplinary studies
that attempt to link archaeological findings with those from other
disciplines. This caution is essential because such age-based linkages
may enter the literature as if proven fact because the limitations of
the data are rarely communicated clearly, either unwittingly or
otherwise. This is anathema to archaeology because the distinction
between 'fact' and 'interpretation' may not always
be obvious to its practitioners.
Whilst we agree in general with their conclusions, we think Buckland
et al. have unintentionally violated one of their own tenets by
constructing a linkage, based on the assumed correlation of radiometric
and ice-core derived dates alone, between the 1259 AD acid spike in ice
cores and an Okataina-derived volcanic eruption in New Zealand. Although
only a minor part of their paper, the construction of this link by
Buckland et al. nonetheless is viewed as the initial step in the
mythicizing process they rightly wish to avoid. We demonstrate that such
a link is untenable because the age data Buckland et al. applied to the
Okataina eruption are flawed, and we suggest that the 'link'
needs correcting before a new myth develops. This correction is
particularly relevant to archaeological studies in the South Pacific
because the Okataina-derived eruptive provides a valuable regional datum
in dating New Zealand's exceptionally brief prehistory (Higham
& Hogg 1997; Newnham et al. 1998).
The 1259 An acid spike and the Kaharoa eruption, Okataina
The 1259[+ or -]2 AD acid signal is one of the largest recorded in
ice cores from Greenland and Antarctica for the past 2000 years (Hammer
et el. 1980; Langway et al. 1988; Zielinski et al. 1994). Because the
spike is common to ice-core records at both poles, Langway et al. (1988)
suggested that the eruption must have been large and equatorial. El
Chichon volcano (Mexico) is a possible source (Palais et al. 1992).
Buckland et el, however, attributed the 1259 AD acid spike to a
mid-latitude eruption from Okataina volcano in North Island
[ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 1 OMITTED]. The 'Okataina' eruption
is clearly the Kaharoa episode, the largest and most recent rhyolitic
event in New Zealand, which resulted in extensive tephra fallout
[ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 1 OMITTED] (Lowe et al. in press a). The basis
of Buckland et al.'s correlation with the 1259 AD ice-core acidity
record is evidently the derivation of a date of 1259[+ or -]11 AD for
the Kaharoa eruption via calibration of associated radiocarbon ages
(Ramsey 1994). This calibrated date is based on the mean age of 770[+ or
-]20 b.p. reported in Simkin & Siebert (1994) following Froggatt
& Lowe (1990). We do not dispute the calibration process per se
except to comment that the Southern Hemisphere offset correction (Vogel
et al. 1993; McCormac et al. in press) does not seem to have been
applied. based on Stuiver & Reimer (1993) and Stuiver & Becker
(1993) and the intercepts method, 770[+ or -]20 b.p. corresponds to
1258-1283 AD without the offset, but with a -40-year offset correction
the calibrated 1[Sigma] range is 1280-1291 AD, clearly incompatable with
1259[+ or -]11 AD at this level of significance. Of more importance to
our discussion is the fact that the 770[+ or -]20 b.p. age has been
revised since its original publication in 1990. Consequently it is no
longer appropriate for obtaining a calibrated date, irrespective of
application of the inter-hemispheric offset correction.
Lowe & Hogg (1992) published four new radiocarbon ages for
Kaharoa eruptives that gave a significantly younger mean age of 665[+ or
-]17 b.p. An identical mean age of 665[+ or -]15 b.p. was obtained more
recently using cluster analysis of 22 radiocarbon ages. This new age,
derived from unscreened ages minus outliers, is supported by
statistically identical ages obtained from three sets of screened ages
selected to minimize the effects of inbuilt age or contamination (Lowe
et al. in press a). The calibration curve in the vicinity of 665 b.p. is
very wiggly and so even high precision radiocarbon ages translate into a
relatively wide range of calendar dates [ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 2
OMITTED]: 665[+ or -]15 b.p. corresponds to 1299-1327 AD and 1350-1391
AD at the 1[Sigma] level, and to 1291-1331 AD and 1343-1399 AD at the
2[Sigma] level (Lowe et al. in press a). These new calibrated dates show
that the Kaharoa eruption must have taken place well after the 1259 AD
acid spike was emplaced, and thus there can be no link between the two
events. In reaching this conclusion we assume the 1259 AD acid signal
date is accurate.
Conclusion: avoiding myth-making
That there is demonstrably no connection between the 1259 AD acid
spike and the c. 1300-1400 AD Kaharoa eruption has little bearing on the
main conclusions reached by Buckland et al., which are forcefully argued
and timely (though disputed: Baillie 1998). Our point is that Buckland
et al. have violated one of their own tenets - the need for caution in
considering possible relationships between events connected by
chronological matching alone - by implying that there is a link between
the 1259 AD spike and a New Zealand eruption. The risk is that the
'link', unless corrected in the literature, will eventually
move along the pathway from 'reasonable speculation' to
'proven fact'. Establishing an accurate date for the Kaharoa
eruption (and discrediting a 'wrong' one) is essential for
archaeology in New Zealand and potentially other parts of East
Polynesia. This is because no prehistoric cultural remains are known to
occur beneath the Kaharoa Tephra (Anderson 1991), and because of the
critical role the tephra has in dating the earliest human-induced
environmental impacts in New Zealand (Newnham et al. in press; Lowe et
al. in press b).
The age data in FIGURE 2 imply that a sulphate spike (or other
environmental effects) from the Kaharoa eruption may be represented in
the ice-core and/or tree-ring records from c. 1290 to 1330 AD or c. 1340
to 1400 AD. The presence of volcanic glass in the same layer as a
sulphate signal in an ice core provides the best way of directly
identifying the source eruption, as shown for Santorini by Zielinski
& Germani (1998). It also provides a potential means of linking the
ice-core and tree-ring records (Baillie 1996). Thus, if glass from the
compositionally distinctive Kaharoa eruption (Stokes et al. 1992) were
identifiable in the ice sheets (e.g. Antarctica), it would provide an
important late Holocene chronostratigraphic marker event for global
ice-core and tree-ring studies and hence other disciplines including
archaeology. In view of its importance, we are attempting to determine a
more precise date for the Kaharoa eruption using dendrochronology (Lowe
et al. in press a).
Acknowledgements. We are grateful to Greg Zielinski for discussions
and a pre-print of Zielinski & Germani (1998}, and to anonymous
reviewers for their comments.
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Paul C. Buckland, Andy J. Dugmore & Kevin J. Edwards comment:
We have to admit that the suggestion of the link between the AD 1259
tephra in both Greenland and Antarctic ice cores and an eruption of
Okataina, New Zealand, in table I of Buckland et al. (1997), reflected a
very deliberate piece of coat-trailing to elicit response. Indeed,
between the correction of final proofs and publication of the paper,
Greg Zielinski (pers. comm.), on geochemical grounds, had already
rendered the connection most unlikely. The eruption in 1259, however,
provides one of the few isochrones which is potentially of global
significance, and there is an urgent need to track it down to source and
to refine tephrochronological techniques to the level of locating it,
and many other eruptions, in sediments other than ice. We are
particularly pleased to see Lowe & Higham's carefully reasoned
response, updating the research and clarifying the situation for the
Southern Hemisphere.
To a great extent, Baillie's response is understandable for
seeking to bolster the dendrochronological dates for Santorini and Hekla
3, but we, trained as environmental scientists, refute any accusation of
protecting archaeologists from environmental determinism. Yet having
spent many years researching the relationships been human populations
and environments in the North Atlantic region and beyond (cf. Dugmore
& Buckland 1991), it is evident that rigid socio-economic
constraints can push systems into collapse in the face of relatively
minor environmental changes - the case of Norse Greenland, lost without
any intercession by volcanoes in the late medieval period [Buckland et
al. 1996), is particularly apposite.
We were also aware of the supposed Exodus connection [Bruins &
van der Plicht 1996), yet to mix Hebraic with Greek myth only serves
further to bolster the modern myth. The most telling comment upon the
dating of Santorini still comes from Bietak's (1996) work at Avaris
and the Egyptian chronology; a 130-year revision in this well
established chronology in order to fit in with a speculative correlation
between tree rings, ice cores and eruptions is unlikely, although this
does not mean that we should seek to reject this if proven on sound
archaeological evidence. Kuniholm et al. (1996) have identified
anomalous growth in the drought-stressed trees of Anatolia in the 17th
century BC, but the correlation to the Santorini eruption is not direct,
and still requires a connecting climatic impact; the mechanism by which
this could be achieved is still not clear.
A central point of our argument is that coincidence between tree-ring
anomalies and vulcanism does not necessarily prove causal relationships,
especially when major eruptions significantly outnumber frost-ring
dates. 75% of frost-ring dates shown in Baillie's (1998) table 1
may indeed be associated with large historical eruptions, but, as shown
in our table 1 (Buckland et al. 1997), in the period since AD 550 there
have been at least 83 eruptions [greater than or equal to] VEI4, where
only 31 frost ring events have been identified (a 37% presumed
association). This estimate of the number of large eruptions is
conservative, and is likely to increase as more tephrochronological work
is undertaken in poorly studied volcanic regions. A key point is that
the mechanisms that might link eruptions and impacts upon the tree-ring
record are not well understood. The type of eruption, the scale,
location relative to global circulation systems, the timing and
coincidence with other eruptions may all be critical variables affecting
the impact of an eruption on climate, even before the ecological
response of trees to environmental change is considered.
We certainly have no intent to 'rubbish' the provision of
hypotheses, but we are only too aware, as Lowe & Higham have rightly
pointed out, that hypotheses rapidly become 'fact' in
archaeology. There maybe connections between particular volcanic
eruptions, tree rings and acidity spikes in ice cores in prehistory, but
we would still hold that, as in Scottish law, most remain 'not
proven'.
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