Grand Solar Minimum Symptoms
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There are several lessons learned from studying very early global cooling events in Europe. See also the discussion of the Great Famine of 1315 in Episode 5.
- Onset of these conditions can be very abrupt and very severe.
- A decline in food production due to:
- Dramatic increase in days with overcast skies.
- Decline in the intensity of sunlight.
- Decline by several degrees in global temperature
- Regions of massive rainfall and flooding
- Limited regions experienced droughts
- Shortened growing season
- A string of major and minor famines
- Malnutrition lead to weakened immune system. Produced influenza epidemics.
- Reoccurrence of plagues such as the Black Plague.
- Lack of feed for livestock
- Parasites (i.e. fusarium nivale), which thrived under snow cover, devastated crops.
- Grain storage in cool damp conditions produced fungus (Ergot Blight). Contaminated grains when consumed caused an illness (St. Anthony’s Fire) producing convulsions, hallucinations, gangrenous rotting of extremities.
- Flooding created swamplands that became mosquito breeding grounds and introduced tropical diseases such as malaria throughout Europe.
- During hot summers, cold air aloft produced killer hailstorms (hailstones that could kill a cow).
- Higher frequency of powerful storms produced major devastations.
- Glacier advance swallowed up entire alpine villages.
- Ruptured glacial ice dams produced deadly floods.
- Drastic increase in seismic activity (earthquake, volcano)
- Hugely increased atmospheric electric charge (fatal lightning strikes, positive lightning, sprites, noctilucent clouds, northern lights)