Vulkanausbrüche können das globale Klimasystem beeinflussen und Klimavariabilität stellt eine besondere Herausforderung für geschichtliche Fragestellungen dar. Auch wenn der Verlauf der Menschheitsgeschichte während der letzten Jahrtausende durch zahlreiche Umweltfaktoren mitbeeinflusst wurde und diese komplexen Zusammenhänge durch historische Quellen und archäologische Funde gut nachgewiesen sind, hadern viele Historiker und Archäologen noch immer damit, naturwissenschaftliche Evidenzen zum besseren Verständnis politischer, ökonomischer gesellschaftlicher und kultureller Veränderungen zu berücksichtigen. Zudem findet die Untersuchung komplexer Mensch-Umweltbeziehungen meistens lediglich innerhalb etablierter Wissenschaftsdisziplinen statt. Die Kooperationsgruppe arbeitet daher an der Schnittmenge zwischen Vulkanen, Klima und Geschichte. Dialog und Debatte zwischen Vertreterinnen und Vertretern verschiedener wissenschaftlichen Disziplinen und theoretischen Denkschulen sollen Wissenslücken aufdecken, neune Fragestellungen entwickeln und epistemologische Gräben überwinden.
Dazu werden Prozesse und Faktoren von Vulkanausbrüchen, Klima- und Umweltveränderungen und gesellschaftlichem Wandel analysiert, raumzeitlich hochaufgelösten paläoklimatischen Rekonstruktionen und Modelsimulationen werden mit in historische Studien und deren Argumentationsabläufen eingebunden. Anhand sorgfältig ausgewählter Beispiele wird der Einfluss großer Vulkanausbrüche auf vergangene, aktuelle und zukünftige Umwelt-Mensch Beziehungen diskutiert.
Dabei stehen folgende Fragen im Mittelpunkt:
Die Kooperationsgruppe wird konzeptionell und methodisch neue Wege gehen, um vergleichende Grundlagenforschung möglichst innovativ an der Schnittstelle zwischen Archäologie, Geschichte, Klimatologie, Ökologie und Vulkanologie zu etablieren. Mit der Auswertung naturwissenschaftlicher und gesellschaftlicher Datenbanken sollen bestehende Wissenslücken langfristig überwunden werden. Der interdisziplinäre Ansatz soll den geschichtlichen Entwicklungsverlauf im Kontext sich ständig verändernder Klima- und Umweltbedingungen diskutieren.
PARTICIPANTS
Fellows
Ulf Büntgen (Cambridge, GBR), Nicola Di Cosmo (Princeton, USA), Jan Esper (Mainz, GER), Lamya Khalidi (Nice, FRA), Franz Mauelshagen (Bielefeld, GER), Clive Oppenheimer (Cambridge, GBR), Eleonora Rohland (Bielefeld, GER)
Guests
Ursula Brosseder (Bonn, GER), Michael Frachetti (St. Louis, USA), Susanne Hakenbeck (Cambridge, GBR), Olaf Jöris (Neuwied, GER), Stefan Kröpelin (Cologne, GER), Charlotte Pearson (Tucson, USA), Felix Riede (Aarhus, DEN)
PARTICIPANTS
Fellows
Ulf Büntgen (Cambridge, GBR), Nicola Di Cosmo (Princeton, USA), Jan Esper (Mainz, GER), Michael Frachetti (St. Louis, USA), Anna Gudjónsdóttir (Hamburg, GER), Lamya Khalidi (Nice, FRA), Franz Mauelshagen (Bielefeld, GER), Clive Oppenheimer (Cambridge, GBR), Eleonora Rohland (Bielefeld, GER)
Guests
Dominik Fleitmann (Basel, CHE), Ronny Friedrich (Mannheim, GER), Fredrik Ljungqvist(Stockholm, SWE), Gill Plunkett (Belfast, GBR), Michael Sigl (Bern, CHE), Philip Slavin (Glasgow, GBR), Moritz Wehrmann (Weimar, GER)
PARTICIPANTS
Fellows
Ulf Büntgen (Cambridge, GBR), Nicola Di Cosmo (Princeton, USA), Jan Esper (Mainz, GER), Michael Frachetti (St. Louis, USA), Anna Guðjónsdóttir (Hamburg, GER), Lamya Khalidi (Nice, FRA), Franz Mauelshagen (Bielefeld, GER), Clive Oppenheimer (Cambridge, GBR), Eleonora Rohland (Bielefeld, GER)
Guests
Jonathan Donges (Potsdam, GER), Fidel Gonzalez-Rouco (Madrid, ESP), Christoph Raible (Bern, CHE), Anja Schmidt (Munich, GER / Cambridge, GBR), Claudia Timmreck (Hamburg, GER), Sebastian Wagner (Geesthacht, GER)
PARTICIPANTS
Fellows
Ulf Büntgen (Cambridge, GBR), Nicola Di Cosmo (Princeton, USA), Jan Esper (Mainz, GER), Michael Frachetti (St. Louis, USA), Anna Gudjónsdóttir (Hamburg, GER), Lamya Khalidi (Nice, FRA), Franz Mauelshagen (Bielefeld, GER), Clive Oppenheimer (Cambridge, GBR), Eleonora Rohland (Bielefeld, GER)
Guests
Rudolf Brázdil (Brno, CZE), Bruce Campbell (Belfast, GBR), Vinita Damodaran (Sussex, UK), Heli Huhtamaa (Bern, CHE), Sturt Manning (Cornell, USA), Tim Newfield (Washington, USA), Ursula Brosseder (Bonn, GER), Frederick Reinig (Mainz, GER), Raymond Ruhaak (Liverpool, UK), Max Torbenson (Mainz, GER), Moritz Wehrmann (Weimar, GER)
PARTICIPANTS
Fellows
Ulf Büntgen (Cambridge, UK), Nicola Di Cosmo (Princeton, USA), Jan Esper (Mainz, GER), Michael Frachetti (St. Louis, USA), Anna Gudjónsdóttir (Hamburg, GER), Lamya Khalidi (Nice, FRA), Franz Mauelshagen (Bielefeld, GER), Clive Oppenheimer (Cambridge, UK), Eleonora Rohland (Bielefeld, GER)
Guests
Tito Arosio (Cambridge, UK), Maddalena Barenghi (Venice, IT), Dario Battistel (Venice, IT), Feng Chen (Kunming, CHN), Minoru Inaba (Kyoto, JPN), Michael Kempf (Kiel, GER), Mark Macklin (Lincoln, USA), Olga Solomina (Moscow, RUS), Sören Stark (New York, USA)
PARTICIPANTS
Fellows
Ulf Büntgen (Cambridge, UK), Nicola Di Cosmo (Princeton, USA), Jan Esper (Mainz, GER), Michael Frachetti (St. Louis, USA), Anna Gudjónsdóttir (Hamburg, GER), Lamya Khalidi (Nice, FRA), Franz Mauelshagen (Bielefeld, GER), Clive Oppenheimer (Cambridge, UK), Eleonora Rohland (Bielefeld, GER)
Cambridge University, UK
Ulf Büntgen is Professor of Environmental Systems Analysis at the Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, UK. His main research interest and expertise are in the reconstruction of climate and environmental change at different spatiotemporal scales, with emphasis on linking natural data with historical evidence.
Princeton, USA
Nicola Di Cosmo is Henry Luce Foundation Professor of East Asian History at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, USA. His main research interest and expertise are in the relations between China and inner Eurasia from prehistory to the modern period, with emphasis on using natural proxy data in the study of the Mongol empire and the Qing dynasty.
Mainz, GER
Jan Esper is Professor of Physical Geography and Climatology at the Gutenberg University in Mainz, Germany. His main research interest and expertise are in dendrochronology and high-resolution paleoclimatology, with emphasis on the development of multimillennial-long ring width and wood density chronologies from the upper and northern treelines.
St. Louis, USA
FMichael Frachetti is Professor of Archaeology in the Department of Anthropology at Washington University in St. Louis. His research focuses on the ecology and social strategies of ancient nomadic societies of Central and Eastern Eurasia. He is the author of Pastoralist Landscapes and Social Interaction in Bronze Age Eurasia (UCPress, 2008). He currently conducts fieldwork in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.
Hamburg, GER
Anna Guðjónsdóttir is an Icelandic artist based in Hamburg. Her main research interest and area of expertise is in painting and site-specific art, transforming an environment into a certain experience based on human understanding of landscape, nature and cultural history. She uses painting and the exhibition space itself as a medium. Her main fieldwork has been concentrated on accessible areas on the mid-Atlantic ridge in Iceland.
Nice, FRA
Lamya Khalidi is a Researcher at CNRS and the University of Cote d’Azur in Nice, France. Her main research interest and expertise are in environmental archaeology, with emphasis on the dynamical processes of human transformation and adaptation in response to volcanism in East Africa and the Middle East during different periods of the Holocene.
Bielefeld, GER
Franz Mauelshagen is a Senior Lecturer at Bielefeld University, Germany. His main research interest and expertise are in environmental history, with a strong expertise in historical climate research, disaster history and the Anthropocene. His work seeks to place examples of human-climate interactions of the Anthropocene in a longer-term context of modern history in, both, the "Old" and "New Worlds".
Clive Oppenheimer12https://www.geog.cam.ac.uk/people/oppenheimer/
Cambridge, UK
Clive Oppenheimer is Professor of Volcanology at the University of Cambridge, UK. His main research expertise is in volcanic processes and hazards, with emphasis on the long-range climatic and societal impacts of eruptions. He has participated in 14 missions to Antarctica, and made two documentary features with Werner Herzog: Into the Inferno, and Fireball: Visitors from Darker Worlds.
Bielefeld, GER
Eleonora Rohland is Professor for Entangled History in the Americas and Director of the Center for InterAmerican Studies (CIAS) at Bielefeld University, Germany. Her main research interest and expertise are in the environmental and climate histories of North America and the Caribbean, with emphasis on the history of knowledge and technology, as well as economic, insurance and disaster history.
Comment: Büntgen U (2024) The importance of distinguishing climate science from climate activism. npj Climate Action 3: 36.