The "Atlantis" eruption was one of the most significant volcanic eruptions
in human history. The blast is credited for not only ending the Minoan
civilization, but also for affecting ancient Egypt and other communities
around the eastern Mediterranean, explained Eva Panagiotakopulu, a palaeoecologist and fossil-insect expert at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland.
Based
on previous evidence, scientists had concluded that the eruption
happened sometime between 1627 to 1600 B.C. But there has been one
important and unresolved question about the event: What season did it
take place in?
In a new study, published in a recent issue of the journal Naturwissenschaften,
Panagiotakopulu and her team now say that based on insect remains found
in a jar containing seeds of sweet peas discovered at the Bronze Age
settlement of Akrotiri, they think the eruption occurred sometime
between June to early July. [...] nationalgeographic.com/
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